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Shelf life and Enviroment

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becchino:
With a view to energy saving and environmental protection, are there studies on the validity of the reagents even after their expired date?

Enthalpy:
Do chemists care about expiration dates at all? Except in radiochemistry and possibly biochemistry.

For very specific reagents maybe, which are knowingly sensitive to time and whose transformation isn't patent?

Corribus:
Well, we care very much about decomposition of reagents. But generally we understand that printed "expiration dates" mean very little because storage conditions vary quite a bit and tolerance for decomposition products depends on specific use parameters. As a matter of course, in our lab we check the purity of starting materials routinely before they are used rather than relying on arbitrary expiration dates written on the bottles - which we are required to put there by our QA committee. Much to our annoyance, the expiration date is 5 years from the date of opening, which is ridiculous because this is the same requirement for sodium chloride and for highly photosensitive reagents. So, it means nothing.

Anyway, to the OP's question, this isn't something that is routinely studied or published because it's hard to extrapolate results from a controlled aging study to the highly uncontrolled conditions in real laboratories, or the many ways in which reagents are used. Studies on decomposition mechanisms are more common, which can be used to predict how reagents are likely to behave and can be used to guide best procedures for storage of potentially unstable chemicals. One exception I've noted is in the area of nanochemistry, as there are some highly regarded studies on the purity of reagents and control over nanomaterial properties. But these don't really relate to "expiration dates", given how meaningless these dates really are.

Enthalpy:
Somehow I had expected QA to be as pointless in chemistry as in electrical and mechanical engineering.

I guess Becchino expected operations like in food industry and was conducting some sort of economic study. But in a lab, chemists have better knowledge and means than an expiry date.

Corribus:

--- Quote from: Enthalpy on January 29, 2020, 08:36:18 AM ---Somehow I had expected QA to be as pointless in chemistry as in electrical and mechanical engineering.

--- End quote ---
For the most part, it is. At least in a research lab.

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