Definition
A standardized document supplied by the manufacturer of a chemical product that lists its hazardous ingredients, physical and chemical properties, health effects, safe handling and storage procedures, personal protective equipment requirements, first-aid measures, spill response, and emergency contact information. In aviation maintenance and ground operations, MSDS documents are kept on file for every chemical product used so that personnel exposed to fuels, solvents, lubricants, hydraulic fluids, paints, and cleaning agents have immediate access to safety information.
Plain English
A safety information sheet that comes with a chemical product. It tells you what's in it, how it can hurt you, how to handle it safely, and what to do if there's a spill or someone gets exposed.
Context Anchor
A pilot may see this term when studying chemical exposure, using aircraft cleaning products, handling fuel-related chemicals, or working around maintenance materials.
Derivation
"Material" refers to the chemical substance itself. "Safety Data Sheet" describes what the document contains — data needed to handle the material safely. The term is straightforward and matches its purpose. Note: in 2012, OSHA replaced "MSDS" with "SDS" (Safety Data Sheet) under a globally harmonized format, but the older MSDS terminology still appears widely in aviation references and older shop documentation.
Why Pilots Care
Pilots may encounter these sheets when dealing with fuel, oil, or de-icing fluids and must know how to respond to exposure or spills.
Intuition Check
An MSDS is not a permission slip saying a chemical is safe. It is a warning and instruction sheet that explains the risks and safe handling steps.
Example Sentence 1
Before using the new degreaser in the hangar, the mechanic checked the MSDS to confirm it was safe to use without a respirator.
Example Sentence 2
After a small fuel spill, the pilot reviewed the MSDS to determine the correct cleanup steps and disposal method.