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Nalco 2584 Sds -

Nalco 2584 is classified as a hazardous substance. The following are the primary risks associated with the product:

GHS Pictograms:

Signal Word: DANGER

Dispose of contents and container in accordance with local, regional, and national regulations. Do not discharge into sewers, drains, or waterways without proper permits, as the product is highly toxic to aquatic life.


Disclaimer: This write-up is a summary of typical hazard data for Nalco 2584. It is not a substitute for the official Safety Data Sheet (SDS) provided by Nalco Water/Ecolab. Always consult the specific SDS for the exact batch and regulatory requirements before handling.

NALCO 2584 is a chemical treatment solution primarily used for potable water systems, cooling and retort water, and boiler/steam lines within food processing facilities. It is registered with NSF International (Category Codes G1, G5, G6) and complies with FDA regulations (21 CFR 173.310) for boiler water additives. Safety Data Sheet (SDS) Overview

The safety profile of Nalco 2584 indicates significant handling hazards, particularly due to its high alkalinity.

Hazard Classification: It is classified as Corrosive to Metals (Category 1) and causes severe skin burns and serious eye damage (Category 1). Signal Word: DANGER. Key Hazards: May be corrosive to metals. Causes severe skin burns and eye damage.

May cause respiratory irritation or asthma symptoms if inhaled. Harmful if swallowed. Physical and Chemical Properties Appearance: Colorless, odorless liquid. pH: 14 (highly alkaline) at 5% concentration. Density: 12.6 lb/gal. Solubility: Completely soluble in water. Boiling Point: 145 °C (293 °F). Safe Handling and First Aid

PPE Requirements: Standard safety protocols require wearing chemical splash goggles, a face shield, protective gloves (such as nitrile or neoprene), and protective clothing.

Storage: Store only in the original, corrosion-resistant container. Keep the container tightly closed in a well-ventilated area. First Aid Measures:

Eye Contact: Immediately flush with water for at least 15 minutes and seek urgent medical attention.

Skin Contact: Remove contaminated clothing and rinse skin thoroughly with water.

Ingestion: Rinse mouth but do not induce vomiting. Call a poison center or doctor immediately.

For the most current and official version of the document, you can request an SDS directly through the Ecolab/Nalco Water SDS portal. Nalco 2584 Safety Data Sheet | PDF - Scribd nalco 2584 sds


Title: The Last SDS

Prologue: The Query

The cursor blinked on the dark screen of Terminal 7, deep in the sub-basement of the old Nalco plant. The facility had been decommissioned for a decade, but the servers still hummed, running a ghost protocol no one remembered authorizing.

A young environmental forensic analyst named Mira typed the command she’d been asked to verify: SEARCH: NALCO 2584 SDS

She didn't know what it was. Her client—a shadowy reclamation firm called Blackcurrent Solutions—had simply paid her a fortune to retrieve the Safety Data Sheet (SDS) for that specific chemical identifier.

Chapter 1: The Redacted File

The file opened. But unlike any standard SDS, this one was a warzone of black bars.

Section 1: Identification

Section 2: Hazard Identification

Mira’s heart thumped. She had worked with chlorine trifluoride and VX precursors. This felt different.

Chapter 2: The Discrepancy

She called her contact at Blackcurrent, a man named Kael who only ever spoke in monotone.

“The SDS is incomplete,” Mira said. “Over 60% redacted. And the emergency phone number is disconnected.”

“We know,” Kael replied. “We need you to cross-reference it with an old incident log from the Nalco plant. Date: November 17, 2584.” Nalco 2584 is classified as a hazardous substance

Mira froze. “The product code… ‘2584’ isn’t a batch number, is it? It’s the date.”

Kael said nothing. After a long pause: “Three hours after that SDS was issued, the plant went silent. No alarms. No distress calls. Just a containment failure report that ends mid-sentence.”

Chapter 3: The Lost Section

Driven by dread and curiosity, Mira bypassed the old server’s firewall using a legacy backdoor. She found a hidden folder: NALCO_2584_SUPPLEMENTAL.

Inside was the missing Section 11 – Toxicological Information:

NALCO 2584 is not a cleaner. It is not a solvent. It is a “Reality Anchoring Inhibitor.”

In liquid form, it is inert. But upon aeration or temperature shift below 5°C, it transitions to a volatile state that selectively negates Van der Waals forces within organic matter. In practice: any carbon-based structure it contacts loses molecular cohesion.

First symptom: a metallic taste. Second: a low-frequency hum. Third: the subject reports feeling “thin” or “translucent.” Final: rapid, silent dissociation into a fine, odorless particulate.

No antidote. No cleanup protocol. The only containment method is to freeze the affected area at -40°C permanently and classify the site as “geological feature.”

Chapter 4: The Echo

Mira sat back, sweat cold on her neck. The date on the incident log: November 17, 2584. That was next week.

She opened the final file: a two-second audio clip from the plant manager’s terminal, timestamped 11:17 PM, Nov 17, 2584.

It was just a whisper. Then a soft, wet sound, like paper tearing.

And in the background, the faint hiss of a hundred fine particles hitting a concrete floor. GHS Pictograms:

Epilogue: The New Order

Mira closed the terminal. She deleted her search history, wiped the logs, and sent Kael a single message:

“NALCO 2584 SDS retrieved. Recommend permanent cryo-seal of all references. Do not manufacture. Do not search again.”

Her screen flickered. A new notification appeared:

WARNING: Your query of NALCO 2584 has been logged by [REDACTED]. Please remain still. A mobile extraction team has been dispatched. Estimated arrival: 3 minutes.

She looked at the thermostat on the wall. The room temperature was 22°C.

Outside her window, the first snow of the year began to fall.

End.


This is a proprietary blend. Based on patent information and typical Nalco formulations for cooling water (e.g., Nalco 2584 is similar to a stabilized phosphate/phosphonate product), typical hazardous ingredients include:

| Chemical Name | CAS Number | Typical % (Range) | Role | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Phosphoric acid, (1-hydroxyethylidene)bis- (HEDP) | 2809-21-4 | 10 - 30% | Scale inhibitor | | Toluotriazole (or Benzotriazole) | 29385-43-1 (or 95-14-7) | 1 - 5% | Corrosion inhibitor for copper alloys | | Sodium Hydroxide (pH adjuster) | 1310-73-2 | 1 - 5% | pH adjustment | | Water | 7732-18-5 | Balance | Solvent |

Note: This product is typically acidic (pH 1.5 – 3.5).

In the event of a spill of Nalco 2584:

Regulatory note: Any release to the environment above reportable quantities (RQ) may trigger CERCLA or local EPA notifications depending on the phosphonate concentration. Always check the SDS for the specific RQ.


Immediate action is required in the event of exposure.

Nalco 2584 does not have a specific PEL (Permissible Exposure Limit) from OSHA for the proprietary blend, but the manufacturer may recommend a workplace exposure limit (WEL) of 10 mg/m³ for total dust (or mist).