The Safety Data Sheet (SDS) is the single most useful document for evaluating an industrial cleaning chemical, and it is available before you ever place an order. Standardized into 16 sections, the SDS tells you how a product must be handled, stored, shipped, and managed — information that often matters more to a buying decision than the marketing copy. This is a buyer-oriented orientation, not safety or regulatory advice; your EHS team and the full SDS govern actual handling.
Section 1 identifies the product and supplier and lists recommended uses and restrictions — a fast check that you are looking at the right material and an intended application. Section 2 covers hazard identification: the signal word, hazard statements, and precautionary statements that summarize what you are working with. For buyers, Section 2 is an early gauge of the PPE, training, and storage a product will require.
Sections 3 and 4 (composition and first-aid measures) inform medical and exposure planning, while Sections 7 and 8 — handling/storage and exposure controls/PPE — are where purchasing, facilities, and EHS often align on whether a product fits the site. If a product demands ventilation, secondary containment, or PPE you cannot support, that is better known before the order than after delivery.
Section 9 (physical and chemical properties) includes data like pH and flash point that connect directly to material compatibility and the neutral-versus-alkaline or solvent decisions buyers make elsewhere. Section 10 (stability and reactivity) flags incompatibilities — what the product must not be mixed with or stored beside — which is essential for sites that warehouse multiple chemistries.
Sections 13 and 14 (disposal and transport) shape real operating cost and logistics. Transport information indicates whether a product ships as hazardous material, which affects freight handling and documentation — relevant on a platform where freight is quoted by a person after the order rather than auto-estimated. Disposal considerations affect how spent solution and empty containers are managed.
Note what the SDS does not do: it is not a performance brochure and rarely contains efficacy or "kill" claims, which live on a product’s label and registration where applicable. For cleaning power and use directions, read the Technical Data Sheet and the product label alongside the SDS. ICD hosts SDS files on its own domain so the documentation stays with the catalog and is available before purchase.
