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Specifically, solvent-contaminated wipes sent for cleaning (i.e., laundering or dry cleaning) are excluded from solid waste regulation under Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) section 261.4(a)(26), known as the reusable wipes exclusion. Solvent-contaminated wipes sent for disposal (i.e., landfilling or
An F-listed waste is a hazardous waste from nonspecific sources. The most common are generated by solvent use and are certain spent solvents that are very specifically defined. These are F001, F002, F003, F004 (not so common), and F005. These five all have the words spent solvent in their definitions.
- If the wipe is contaminated only with an ignitable solvent (e.g. isopropyl alcohol) that is not listed, consider performing a waste determination and managing as a non-hazardous waste. - If the wipe is contaminated with a corrosive cleaner, the exclusion will not apply.
Wipes that Can Be Disposed in Normal Trash Examples include ethanol or isopropyl alcohol wipes where the ethanol or isopropyl alcohol has been consumed during use and the wipe is dry at the time of disposal.
A brief description of each of these four characteristics is provided below. Ignitable Wastes. Corrosive Wastes. Reactive Wastes. Toxic Wastes.

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Solvent-contaminated wipes that are sent for cleaning and reuse are not solid wastes, provided the conditions of the exclusion are met. Solvent-contaminated wipes that are sent for disposal are not hazardous wastes, provided the conditions of the exclusion are met.
Many common solvents may be hazardous wastes when they are spent, or can no longer be used. Also, many commercial chemical products are solvents and are considered a hazardous waste if they are unused when discarded.
Any dry non-protic polar solvent, e.g. THF, DME and dichloromethane, however all these are toxic to some extent. The only truly non-toxic solvent is water.
The universe of hazardous wastes is large and diverse. Hazardous wastes can be liquids, solids, or contained gases. They can be the by-products of manufacturing processes, discarded used materials, or discarded unused commercial products, such as cleaning fluids (solvents) or pesticides.
The definition of a solvent-contaminated wipe includes these common examples of wipes after they are contaminated with flammable or toxic solvents: Paper towels. Cloth rags. Cotton swabs. Shop towels.

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