Overview
One trunk. One chemistry. The whole response.
Most spill response goes wrong in the first minute — not because the chemistry fails, but because the gloves are in one drawer, the absorbent pads are in another, the waste bags are missing, and the only person who knows where the wipes live is on the other end of the building. The Decon Response Kit eliminates that minute. Open the trunk, and the response is already organized.
Why we built it.
S4FE-D® chemistry has been the standard for nuclear-medicine spill response for thirty-plus years. The chemistry isn’t the problem — the moment is. The moment a contamination event happens is the moment a responder needs to not be opening drawers. They need to be opening one container with everything inside it.
So we built the kit the way our service technicians have always built their own response bags: a single rugged trunk, a known inventory list, every consumable from gross-spill containment through final wipe-down available at arm’s reach. Powered by S4FE-D®’s 98 % chemical / 98 % biological / 99 % radiological removal — independently verified by Qal-Tek Associates — the chemistry handles whatever the responder finds without requiring them to identify it first.
What makes it different from a generic spill kit.
A typical commercial spill kit is built around absorbents: pads, socks, booms designed to soak up bulk liquid. That’s the first 30 seconds of the response, not the whole thing. After the bulk is contained, the surface, the equipment, and the responder still need to be decontaminated. The DRK includes both halves — absorbents and the chemistry to clean what the absorbents leave behind — in one container, sized to actually finish the job.
Who it’s for.
Hot labs, nuclear pharmacies, hospital nuclear medicine departments, fire and EMS, ambulance services, civil-defense response caches, military medical, industrial chemical-handling facilities, university research labs, and any responder community that may meet a chemical, biological, or radiological surface contamination event and needs one chemistry, one container, one workflow rather than three or four bottles depending on what they find.