Environmental and Health Assesment of Alternatives to Phthalates and to
flexible PVC
The complete result of the screening for environmental and health data
is given in the data sheets presented in the appendix. Each data
collection has been based primarily on review literature, handbooks and
electronic databases and for selected key studies on the original paper,
if available. The first page of each data sheet presents a short summary
of the most important findings and if relevant a remark regarding special
properties of the compound.
The information marked by ¨in the data
sheets of appendix 4 is considered key data for the assessment.
The list of literature represents the sources of information, which
have been consulted. Not necessarily all references are quoted in each
table.
Diethylhexyl adipate
CAS number: 103-23-1
Physical-chemical, emission, exposure, health and
environment data |
Summary
Physical-chemical
The reviewed data on diethylhexyl adipate (DEHA) indicates that
the substance is non-volatile and slightly flammable compound with
low water solubility. Further, the available data on LogPow
indicates strong lipophilicity and partitioning to particles and
biota. DEHA has a migration potential in PVC films, which in several
cases exceeds the Danish limit of 4 mg/dm2.
Emission
DEHA is according to the available estimates released during
production, and from consumer products.
Exposure
DEHA has been found in the aquatic environment, in drinking water
and in sewage sludge. DEHA has also been found to migrate into food,
which has been in contact with cling films.
Occupational exposures occur during the production.
Health
The lowest LD50 was 7,392 mg/kg bw in rat in acute
oral tests. Acute effects were not observed from DEHA in inhalation
studies nor was DEHA shown to be sensitising. DEHA was slightly
irritating to skin and eyes in rabbits.
The subacute NOAEL was 610 mg/kg bw in rat and more than 3,100 ppm
in mouse.
DEHA was only slightly mutagenic in in vitro tests. Studies
on dominant lethal mutations in mouse showed a LOAEL on 450 mg/kg
bw. Metabolites showed no mutagenic effects in Ames tests with Salmonella
typhimurium.
DEHA shows limited evidence of carcinogenicity in animals (IARC,
category 3).
NOAEL was 170 mg/kg bw/day for both the parent and the F0
generation in reproductive toxicity studies in rats. The NOAEL was
170 mg/kg/day and LOAEL was 1,080 mg/kg/day to rat in reproductive
toxicity tests.
Critical effect: NOAEL, foetotoxicity was 28 mg/kg bw/d.
Several hexyl carboxylic acid derivated metabolites have been
identified in humans. Elimination half-life of DEHA was only 1½
hour. Distribution of DEHA was highest in body fat, liver and kidney
when administered once intravenous or intragastrically to mouse and
rat. No DEHA was observed in mouse after 4 days.
Based on the available data, DEHA does not fulfil the criteria
for classification according to the Substance Directive /EU 1967/
for any of the described effects.
Environment
According to the available biodegradation data there is good
evidence of ready biodegradability of DEHA.
In one study DEHA is very toxic to D. magna with 50%
mortality slightly below 1 mg/l. The available ecotoxicological data
on DEHA from several other experiments show no mortality in algae,
crustaceans, and three fish species at concentrations up to 100
times the water solubility of DEHA. The maximum acceptable toxicant
concentration in a chronic test on reproduction in D. magna
was 0.024-0.052 mg/l. Bioaccumulation was 27 in test with bluegills,
100 times less than predicted from LogPow.
|
Diethylhexyl adipate |
Identification of the substance |
CAS No. |
103-23-1 |
|
EINECS No. |
203-090-1 |
|
EINECS Name |
Bis(2-ethylhexyl) adipate |
|
Synonyms |
Adipic acid bis(2-ehtylhexyl) ester, adipol 2 EH, AI3-28579,
BEHA, bis(2-ehtylhexyl) adipate, bis(2-ethylhexyl)ester adipic acid,
bis(2-ethylhexyl)ester hexandioic acid, bis(2-ehtylhexyl)
hexanedioate, bisoflex DOA, D, DEHA, di-2-ethylhexyl adipate,
di(2-ethylhexyl) adipate, diethylhexyl adipate, di-octyl-adipat,
diisooctyladipat, dioctyl adaipate, DOA, Effemoll DOA, Effomoll DA ,
Effomoll DOA, ergoplast ADDO, flexol A 26, flexol plasticiser 10-A,
Flexol plasticiser A-26, Flexol plasticiser A 26, hexanedioic acid,
bis(2-ehtylhexyl) ester, exanedioic acid, bis(2-ehtylhexyl) ester
(9CI), hexanedioic acid, di(2-ehtylhexyl) ester, hexanedioic acid,
dioctyl ester, Kemester 5652, Kodaflex DOA, Lankroflex DOA, Mollan
S, Monoplex, Monoplex DOA, NCI-C54386, NSC 56775, octyl adipate,
Plastomoll, Plastomoll DOA, PX-238, Reomol DOA, Rucoflex plasticiser
DOA, Sicol, Sicol 250, Staflex DOA, Truflex DOA, Uniflex DOA,
Vestinol OA, Wickenol 158, Witamol, Witamol 320. |
Molecular Formula |
C22H42O4 |
|
Structural Formula |
Illustration. Structural Formula CAS No.103-23-1(2 Kb)
|
Major Uses |
Plasticiser in PVC and other polymers processing.
Hydraulic fluid.
Plasticiser or solvent in cosmetics.
Plasticiser in PVC films.
Aircraft lubrication.
Application of paints and coatings. |
[3]
[3]
[3]
[3]
[12]
[12] |
IUCLID |
The compound is included on the IUCLID HPVC list. |
|
EU classification |
The compound is not included in Annex I to 67/548/EEC |
|
Physico-chemical Characteristics |
Physical Form |
Colourless or very pale amber liquid.
Light-coloured, oily liquid.
Clear colourless liquid.
Colourless liquid |
[3]
[6]
[6]
[15] |
Molecular Weight (g/mole) |
370.57 |
|
Melting Point/range (° C) |
¨-67.8
–65 to –79
–65
–76 (DIN-ISO 3016) |
[13]
[1,10,12]
[15]
[16] |
Boiling Point/range (°C) |
210-218
¨417
214 (at 5 mm Hg)
210-218 (DIN 53171, at 20.7 mm Hg)
210-220 (at 14.8 mm Hg)
210-218 (at 5.5 mm Hg, DIN 53171) |
[1]
[13]
[3,12]
[10]
[15]
[16] |
Decomposition Temperature (°C) |
No data found |
|
Vapour Pressure (mm Hg at °C) |
1.58 (100 ° C)
2.4 (200 ° C)
8.5´ 10-7 (20 °
C)
<0.01 (20 ° C)
2.35´ 10-6 (calculated, 25°
C)
¨ 8.50´ 10-5
(20 ° C)
2.6 (20 ° C)
0.03 (20 ° C)
0.016 (100 ° C) |
[1]
[2]
[3]
[8]
[8]
[10]
[12]
[15]
[16] |
Density (g/cm3 at ° C) |
0.924 (DIN 51757, 20 ° C)
0.922 (25 ° C)
0,9268 (20 ° C)
0.923-0.926 (20 ° C) |
[1,10,16]
[3]
[6]
[15] |
Vapour Density (air=1) |
12.8 |
[3] |
Henry’s Law constant (atm/m3/mol at °
C) |
4.34´10-7 (measured, 20 °
C)
4.34´10-7 (measured, 25 °
C)
2.13´ 10-5 (estimated, 25°
C) |
[3]
[10]
[8] |
Solubility (g/l water at ° C) |
<0.1 (20 ° C)
<0.1 (22 ° C)
¨ 0.00078 (22 °
C)
0.1 (estimated, 25 ° C)
0.2 (20 ° C) |
[1,16]
[6]
[3,6]
[10]
[10] |
Partition Coefficient (log Pow) |
¨ 8.114 (estimated)
¨ > 6.11 (measured)
4.2 (estimated)
¨ 8.1-8.114 (estimated)
6.114-8.2 (estimated)
¨ 8.1 (estimated) |
[1]
[3]
[8]
[10]
[10]
[12,15] |
pKa |
Not applicable |
|
Flammability |
Slightly flammable when exposed to heat
¨ Must be preheated before ignition |
[3]
[6] |
Explosivity |
No data found |
|
Oxidising Properties |
No data found |
|
Migration potential in polymer |
From PVC films to isooctane:
8.1-48.1 mg/dm2
From PVC to olive oil:
8.2-41.3 mg/dm2 (reduced 2.6-41.3 mg/dm2) |
[14]
[14]
|
Emission Data
|
During production |
Estimated:
¨ Ca. 1 % to atmosphere of treated
amount of plastizicer
0.001 % to hydrosphere of total production amount |
[10]
[10]
|
Exposure Data
|
Aquatic environment, incl. sediment |
Measured:
Rw winter 0.08-0.3 ppb
Rw 1-30 ppb
Lw 35-130 ng/l
Fw 0.2-1.0 m g/l
Lw 0.01 –7.0 m g/l
Untreated dw 0.02 mg/l
Rw 1 m g/l
Indust. effluent 8.2 m g/l
Sediment 0.1 mg/kg
Lake sediment 3 mg/kg dry weight |
[3,12]
[3]
[3,10]
[3]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
|
Terrestrial environment |
No data found |
|
Sewage treatment plant |
Measured:
Effluent 2-70 ppb
Effluent 2000 ppb
Effluent 10 m g/l
Influent 90 m g/l
Influent 0.1-3 m g/l |
[3]
[3]
[10]
[10]
[10]
|
Working environment |
Measured:
Indoor, office 2 ng/m3
Indoor, packing room max 214 m g/m3
Indoor, laboratory 0.001-0.0014 m
g/m3
Indoor, telephone exchange 0.002 m g/m3
Indoor, meat packing room av. 11.7 m g/m3
Indoor, meat packing room max 14.7 m g/m3 |
[3]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
|
Consumer goods |
No data found |
|
Man exposed from environment |
No data found |
|
"Secondary poisoning" |
Measured:
Dw 77 ppb
Dw 0.002 ppb
Dw 0.1 m g/l
Dw 20.0 m g/l
Fruits/vegetables 0.2-6.4 mg/kg
Sandwich 30-325 mg/kg
Cheese 28-2,100 mg/kg
Fresh pork 1.8-64 mg/kg
Fresh lamb 2.9-11 mg/kg
Fresh beef 1.0-8.0 mg/kg
Fresh chicken 8.5-53 mg/kg
Draught beer 0.01-0.07 mg/kg
Bottled beverage 0.01-0.1 mg/kg
PVC wrapped food 41-362 mg/kg
Mango slices 0.2 mg/kg
Cabbage 4.8 mg/kg
Cake slices 200 mg/kg
55 % Minced beef 81.8 mg/kg
Olive oil 192-391 mg/kg
Chocolate 0.38 mg/kg
Biscuits 0.11 mg/kg
Cheese 15-2100 mg/kg
Fresh meat 49-151 mg/kg
Boiled meat 40 mg/kg
Dialysis patients (1-5h.) 2.7-9.7 mg/l perfusate
Oxplasma (5h.) 80-90 mg/l
Human plasma 50-100 mg/l blood |
[3]
[3,10]
[3]
[3]
[3]
[3,10]
[3]
[3]
[3]
[3]
[3]
[3]
[3]
[3]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
|
Atmosphere |
Measured:
Coal smoke 73 m g/Nm3
Estimated:
Rain 1 m g/l
Air 15–20 pg/m3 |
[10]
[10]
[10]
|
Dermal |
No data found |
|
Toxicological data
|
Observations in humans |
Irritation and sensitisation:
The concentration of DEHA in working environment was at 4 workplaces
below detection limit. Only one worker reported having difficulties
with the respiratory passages. |
[1,10]
|
|
¨ In the meatpacking industry 685
workers were investigated. The average DEHA concentration in the
rooms was 11.7 m g/m3 to 14.6 m
g/m3. Workers with asthma or allergy seemed to have more
pronounced reactions. |
[1]
|
|
0.01-0.225% (4 testrows) 370 persons. One incidence of mild skin
reaction. |
[10]
|
|
0.175% to 9% DEHA in cosmetic products151 subjects mild skin
irritation was observed in two subjects in induction tests with.
(CFTA 1976). |
[29]
|
|
Cosmetic products containing 0.175% to 9% of DEHA. Mild
irritation was observed in two of 151 human subjects at the
induction tests. Repeated insult patch test. |
[10]
|
|
9% DEHA in cosmetic product (3 times per w for 3 w) 209 subjects.
Light to strong erythema was observed in 4 of 209 subjects
(BIBRA/CFTA 1978A). |
[10,31]
|
|
Undiluted DEHA. Not sensibility observed. |
[10] |
|
9% (repeated treatment) 25 subjects. No photo-sensibilisating
reactions observed. |
[10]
|
|
ADI:
¨ ADI for man : 0.3 mg DEHA/kg bw/d |
[23]
|
|
Toxicokinetics
50 mg H2 marked DEHA in 6 test persons. 2-ethyl-5-hydroxyhexanoic
acid was observed as the main metabolite in the urine. |
[1,10]
|
|
¨ 46 mg/person (once) administration
in an oral gelantine capsule. Metabolites in blood (up to 31 h after
administration) and urine (up to 96 h after administration)
investigated. The main metabolite in blood was 2-ethylhexyl acid.
Elimination half time was 1.65 h. In urine the observed metabolites
were 2-ethylhexylanoic acid (8.6%), 2-ethyl-5-hydroxyhexanoic acid
(2.6%) 2-ethyl-1,6-hexandioicacid (0.7%), 2-ethyl-5-ketohexanoic
acid (0.2%) and 2-ethylhexanol (0.1%). Half life time was approx.
1.5 h. After 36 h no metabolites were found in the urine. |
[10,40]
|
|
50 mg (single) oral administration. Metabolites after 24 h in
humans investigated in urine and faeces. 1.5-8 %
2-ethyl-5-hydroxyhexanacid, 0.5-1.5% 2-ethyl-5-ketohexanacid.
0.15-1% 2-ethyl-1,6-hexandiacid. In faeces di-(2-ethylhexyl)adipate
and mono-(2-ethyl-hexyl)adipate were found. |
[10,41] |
Acute toxicity
|
Oral |
Rat:
Test dose not given. LD50 was 45,000 mg/kg bw.
Test dose not given. LD50 was 24,600 mg/kg bw.
Test dose not given. LD50 was 14,800 mg/kg bw.
¨ Test dose not given. LD50
was 7,392 mg/kg bw.
Test dose not given. LD50 was 9,110 mg/kg bw.
Test dose not given. LD50 was 20,290 mg/kg bw.
Test dose not given. LD50 was 20,000-50,000 mg/kg bw.
Test dose not given. LD50 was 9,110 mg/kg
Test dose not given. LD0 was 6,000 mg/kg
Mouse:
Test dose not given. LD50 was 15,000 mg/kg bw.
Test dose not given. LD50 was 24,600 mg/kg bw.
Guinea pig:
Dose£14 ml/kg. Effects: 50% died after
2-3 d
Test dose not given. LD50 was 12,900 mg/kg bw. |
[1,10]
[1,10]
[1,10]
[1,10, 24]
[1,10]
[1,10]
[1,10]
[6,10]
[10]
[1,10]
[1,10]
[3]
[1,10] |
Dermal |
¨ Test dose not given. LD50
was 8,410 mg/kg
Test dose not given. LD50 was 15,100 mg/kg |
[1,6,10,26]
[1] |
Inhalation |
Rat:
8h exposure, no effects observed
¨ 900 g/m3 (4 hours). No
effects |
[1]
[27] |
Other routes |
Rat:
i.v., LD50=900 mg/kg bw
Rabbit:
¨ i.v., LD50=540 mg/kg bw |
[1,6,10]
[1,6,10,28] |
|
Rat:
Test dose not given. i.p., LD50>6,000 mg/kg bw
Test dose not given. i.p., LD50>46,000 mg/kg bw
Test dose not given. i.p., LD50>47,000 mg/kg bw |
[1,10]
[1]
[1]
|
|
Mouse:
¨ Test dose not given. i.p., LD50 ca.
150 mg/kg bw
Test dose not given. i.p., LD50>5,000, mg/kg bw, GLP
Test dose not given. i.p., LD50>5,000 mg/kg bw
Test dose not given. i.p., LD50>9,240 mg/kg bw
Test dose not given. i.p., LD50>92,400 mg/kg bw
Test dose not given. i.p., LD50 app. 150,000 mg/kg bw |
[1,25]
[1]
[1]
[1]
[1]
[1]
|
|
Rabbit:
Test dose not given. i.p., LD50>38,000 mg/kg bw
|
[1,10]
|
Skin irritation |
Rabbit:
Test dose not given. Not irritating (5 studies)
¨ 500 mg; Test dose not given. Slightly
irritating (2 studies) |
[1,10]
[1,10,26] |
Eye irritation |
Rabbit:
No dose specified. Not irritating, BASF test.
0.1 ml (92.4 mg). Not irritating.
No dose specified. Not irritating, Draize test.
¨ 0.5 ml (462 mg) test substance. Small
foci with necroticism.
500 mg. Slightly irritating.
Test dose not given (24 h) particular attention to cornea. Degree of
injury rated 1. Most severe injury has been rated 10.
No dose specified. Temporary redness of conjunctive. No effects
observed after 24 hours. |
[1]
[1,10]
[1]
[1,10,20]
[1,10]
[3, 19]
[10]
|
Irritation of respiratory tract |
No data found |
|
Skin sensitisation |
Guinea pig:
Application of o.05ml/0.1% and weekly o.1ml/0.1% over (3 w). Not
sensitising, Draize test |
[1,10]
|
|
¨ First application 0.05 ml 0.1%
solution, thereafter 0.1 ml 0.1 % solution 3 times/w (3 w) 10 males.
Not sensitising, patch test. |
[1,10,30]
|
Subchronic and Chronic Toxicity
|
Oral |
Many other studies found.
Mouse:
700 and 1,500 mg/kg/d (2-year) feeding. Dose related depression of
weight gain.
¨ B6C3F1 mice: 240-3,750 mg/kg bw
(13 w) feeding. Decrease in weight gain in male mice at 465 mg/kg
bw. |
[4]
[1,10,21]
|
|
Rat:
0.5, 2, 5% (500 to 5,000 mg/kg, one month) in diet. Growths effect
at 5 %.
Fisher 344 rats: 0.25, 0.5, 1.0, 2.0 % (250 to 2,000 mg/kg,
one month) in diet, males. Enlargement of liver at 2 % doses.
Wistar rats: 2% (2 w) in diet, males. Hepatic peroxisome
proliferation, increased liver size, enzyme catalase and cartinine
acetyltranferase and hypolipidemia
0, 0.1, 0.6, 1.2, 2.5% (21 d) in diet. Differences in Bw, in liver
weights, kidney weights. Increases in different liver lipids, minor
differences between male and females. Dose related increase in
peroxisome proliferation at doses above 0.1%, except in female group
0.6 and 1.2% (equivocal).
¨ 700 and 1,500 mg/kg/d (2-year)
feeding. Dose related depression of weight gain, NOAEL = 700
mg/kg/d, LOAEL = 1,500 mg/kg/d.
Fisher 344 rats: 1,600, 3,100, 6,300, 12,500, 25,000 ppm
(approx. 160-2,500 mg/kg/d; 13-w) oral feeding. NOAEL >
12,500 ppm
0.16 to 4.7 g/kg/d (90 d) in food. Reduced growth and altered liver
and kidney weights in dose groups between 2.9 to 16-4.74 g/kg/d.
Death produced at 4.74 g/kg. No effect in animals dosed 0.16 g/kg.
¨ 610-4,760 mg/kg (90 d). NOAEL=610
mg/kg
100 mg/kg (19 months), oral. NOAEL>100 mg/kg |
[3,10]
[1]
[3]
[3]
[3,4,21]
[1, 4]
[3]
[1,10,20]
[1,20]
|
|
Dog:
2 g/kg (2 month) in diet. Transient loss of appetite. |
[3]
|
Inhalation |
No data found |
|
Dermal |
No data found |
|
Mutagenicity, Genotoxicity and Carcinogenicity
|
Mutagenicity |
Mouse:
Mutational effect in spermatogenesis and adverse effects in
premeiotic stage
5 g/kg/d (one or two d) i.p. 6 animals/sex. No significant
difference in incidence of polychromatic erythrocytes. Micronucleus
test.
¨ 0, 0.45, 0.9, 4.6, 9.2 g/kg bw (single
dose) intraperitoneal injection to male mice (10/dose), thereafter
fertilisation of 2 female/male. Dose related decrease in fertility,
dose related increase in dominant-lethal mutations (early foetal
deaths). LOAEL was 450 mg/kg bw. |
[3]
[1,3]
[4,10,22] |
|
Mouse lymphoma cell:
Up to 1,000 nl/ml. Not mutagenic without activation up to 1,000
nl/ml, or at concentration ranging from 15.6 to 250 nl/ml in the
presence of activation. Growth parameters was 21.4% at the high dose
level in absence of activation and 69.6 to 19.7% at the levels
tested in the presence of activation. With and without metabolic
activation. |
[1,3]
|
|
Drosophila melanogaster :
5,000 ppm (injection) and 20,000 ppm (feeding) male.
Canton-S-wild-type males were treated and then mated with 3 harems
of virgin females. No sex-linked recessive lethal mutation. 30%
mortality in males. |
[1,3] |
|
Salmonella typhimurium :
¨ 0.025-10.0 mg/plate. Test strains:
TA 1535, TA 1537, TA 1538, TA 98, TA 100. Not mutagenic, with or
without activation. Preliminary range finding study non-toxic in
levels up to 10 mg/plate.
Up to 2 ml of urine from rats dosed 2,000 mg/kg (15d) gavage. Test
strains: TA 1535, TA 1537, TA 1538, TA 98, TA 100. No mutagenicity.
Modified Ames test, with and without metabolic activator.
0.15-150.0 m l/plate. Test strains: TA
1535, TA 1537, TA 1538, TA 98, TA 100. Not mutagenic. Ames
Salmonella/Microsome plate test, with or without activation.
Preliminary range finding study non-toxic in levels up to 150 m
l/plate.
Up to 1000 m g /plate, test strains:
TA97, TA98, TA100, TA102. Negative. Ames assay with and without
metabolic activation. |
[3,4,10,
32]
[3]
[1,3,10]
[3]
|
|
Saccharomyces cerevisiae :
Not mutagenic in test. |
[3] |
|
Rat:
Negative, bioassay test
No dose specified (single) oral gavage dose, ability of different
tumor promoters to DNA synthesis. Test positive, stimulation of DNA
synthesis occurred.
5-1,000 nl/ml (20-24 h) closed culture vessels. No change in nuclear
labelling, slight decrease in relative survival at 1,000 nl/ml dose
level (84%). DNA repair assay. |
[3]
[3]
[3]
|
Chromosome abnormalities |
No data found. |
|
Other genotoxic effects |
Human Lymphocytes
¨ 10, 50, 100 µg/ml. Negative. OECD
guideline no. 473, with and without metabolic activation.
CHO cells
¨ <400 m
g/ml. A weak positive effect without S9 fraction. Not mutagenic with
the S9 fraction. With and without metabolic activation system. |
[1,10,33]
[1,10,34]
|
Other toxic effects |
Mouse cell line
3.38, 6.75, 13.5, 27.0 nl/ml in 0.5% acetone (72 h) mouse cell line.
No induction change of appearance of number of transformed foci.
Cell survival ranged from 89-37.7% relative to control. Cell
transformation Assay.
0.07, 0.7, 7, 28, 42 nl/ml in 0.5% acetone (48 h) mouse cell line.
No induction change of appearance of number of transformed foci.
Cell survival ranged from 52.3 to 11.5% relative to control. Cell
transformation Assay.
0.003, 0.01, 0.1, 0.3 nl/ml in 0.5% acetone (48 h) mouse cell line.
No induction change of appearance of number of transformed foci.
Cell survival ranged from 99.7 to 43.5% relative to control. Cell
transformation Assay. |
[3]
[3]
[3]
|
Carcinogenicity |
Mouse
¨ B6C3F1 mice: 1,800, 3,750
mg/kg/d (103 w) 50 animals/sex/dose group. Carcinogenic to female
mice, incidence of hepatocellular liver tumors in female mice.
LD50= 47 ml /kg, ip. Carcinogenic bioassay.
¨ Test dose not given, oral gavage. LD50,
male =15 g/kg. Carcinogenic bioassay.
Test dose not given, oral gavage. LD50, female =25
g/kg. Carcinogenic bioassay.
B6C3F1 mice: 0, 12,000, 25,000 ppm (104 w) oral in diet. Test
substance related liver carcinoma or adenoma observed. |
[1,3,10,
21]
[3]
[3,21]
[3]
[4]
|
|
Rat
LD50=0.9 ml/kg, i.v. Carcinogenicity bioassay.
LD50=5.6 g/kg, oral. Carcinogenicity bioassay.
LD50=47 ml/kg, ip. Carcinogenicity bioassay.
LD50, male =45 g/kg, oral gavage.
Carcinogenicity bioassay.
LD50, female =25 g/kg, oral gavage.
Carcinogenicity bioassay.
Male Wistar rats: Hepatic microsomal lauric acid hydroxylase
activity and peroxisome proliferation in liver, phenobarbital and
3-methylcholanthrene total cytochrome P450 was 1.7-2.7 times
induced.
Fisher 344 rats: 1.2, 2.5, 1.5%, to males in diet.
Significant increase in 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine levels in liver
after 1 and 2 weeks of treatment. Indicates involvement of oxidative
DNA damage in hepatocarcinogenesis by peroxisome proliferation.
Fisher 344 rats: 0, 12,000, 25,000 ppm (103 w) oral in diet.
Test substance related liver carcinomas or adenomas were not
observed.
¨ Fisher 344 rats: 600, 1,250
mg/kg/d (103 w) oral feed 1-3 times/w, 50 animals/sex. Not
potentially carcinogenic to rats. |
[3,21]
[3]
[3]
[3]
[3]
[3]
[3]
[4]
[1,10,21]
|
|
Mouse and rat
¨ Fisher 344 rats and B6C3F1
mice: 2.5 g/kg/d. Dose related increase in liver weight, palmitoyl
CoA oxidation markedly increased, some glycogen loss, dose-related
hypertrophy, increased eosinophilia in both mice and rats,
peroxisome proliferation combined with reduction of lipid in the
centrilobar hepatocytes. Indication of higher sensitivity for rats
than mice to hepatic peroxisome proliferation due to DEHA.
No dose specified (2 year). Hepatocarcinogenesis in female mice. |
[3]
|
|
Male Fisher 344 rats and female B6C3F1 mice: 2 g/kg
(14 d). Significant increase in perixomal-acyl-CoA and catalase,
decrease in glutathione peroxidase in rats and mice. Increase in
steady state hydrogen concentration in liver homogenates.
Fisher 344 rats and female B6C3F1 mice: 12,000 and
25,000 ppm (103 w) oral, 50 animals per dose group. Decrease in BW
in high dose groups. Not carcinogenic.
Carcinogenic to rats. Carcinogenic to mice, especially female mice.
Dose related occurrence of adenomas and hepatocellular carcinomas in
mice, significant in males in high dose group and in females in low
and high dose groups. Carcinogenic bioassay. |
[3,35]
[3,4]
[3,4] |
Cancer Review |
IARC - Not classifiable as a human carcinogen. Limited evidence
of carcinogenicity in animals. |
[6] |
Reproductive Toxicity, Embryotoxicity and
Teratogenicity
|
Reproductive Toxicity/teratogenicity |
Many studies present. |
|
|
Mouse:
Test dose not given, single IP doses to males, mated with untreated
females. Dose-dependent antifertility, dominant lethal mutation
indicated by reduced the % of pregnancies and increased number of
early foetal deaths. |
[3,4]
|
|
Rat:
¨ Alpk:APfSD rats: 0, 300, 1,800,
12,000 ppm (28, 170 1,080 mg/kg/d; 10 w). No treatment related
effects on male or female fertility. Fertility study (OECD
415/1988). NOAEL, parental= 1,800 ppm, NOAEL, F0 offspring= 1,800. |
[46]
|
|
¨ Alpk:APfSD rats: 0, 28, 170,
1080 mg/kg/d, 24 pregnant females/dose, in diets on gestation days
1-22. Changes in maternal bw gain, and food consumption, reduced
ossification, Kinked and dilated uterus in foetuses, developmental
study (OECD 414/1981). NOAEL
(foetotoxicity) = 28 mg/kg bw/d. Not significant. |
[4,10] |
|
¨ Sprague Dawley rats: 0.9,
4.6, 9.2 g/kg (on day 5, 10 and 15 of gestation) i.p. 5 pregnant
rats. Reduced foetal weight in dose groups 4.6 and 9.6 g/kg.
Developmental/teratogonicity study. NOAEL (maternal toxicity) = 0.9
g/kg bw/d, NOAEL (teratogenicity) = 0.9 g/kg bw/d (higher values in
ref. [46]). |
[4,10] |
Toxicokinetics
|
Toxicokinetics |
Rat:
¨ In vivo - different doses of
DEHA and mono-(2-ethylhexyl)-adipate (5d) gavage, in vitro – hepatocytes.
No DEHA in urine after 24 h. Adipic acid was main metabolite,
2-ethylhexanol pathway showed further metabolites, mainly
2-ethylhexanoic acid which was conjugated or submitted to other
pathways, 2-ethylhexanoic acid glucoronidation appeared dose and
time dependent, 2-ethylhexanol glucoronidation was more stable. In
vitro, first hydrolysis of DEHA a rate limiting step, when
adding mono-(2-ethylhexyl)adipate all in vivo metabolites
were found, Glucoronidation of 2-ethylhexanol and 2- ethylhexanoic
acid was dose and time dependent. |
[3,38] |
|
Mouse, rat, guinea pig, marmoset:
¨ Up to 5 mM, metabolites of DEHA,
potential as peroxisome proliferators. In mice
mono(2-ethylhexyl)adipate and 2-ethylhexanol equipotent in inducing
oxidation, 2-ethylhexanoic acid increased oxidation by 25 fold at
1mM, other metabolites smaller increases in oxidation. Concentration
of respectively 2-ethylhexanoic acid, 2-ethylhexanol and
mono(2-ethylhexyl)adipate above 1mM resulted in cytotoxic signs
(blebbing, rounding of cells, detachment from the cultured flasks).
No peroxisomal beta-oxidation at up to 5 mM DEHA in rats hepatocytes
and at up to 2 mM in guinea pig or marmoset hepatocytes. |
[3,39]
|
|
Mouse and rat:
Test dose unspecified, 14C-labelled (carbonyl or alcohol moiety)
DEHA (once) on day 17 of gestation, male rats, male mice and
pregnant female mice, i.v., in dimethyl sulfoxide and
intragastrically. Distribution highest in body fat, liver, kidney
when administered i.v. or intragastrically, 14C activity in bronchi
of male mice (alcohol labelled), in pregnant mice DEHA observed in
foetal liver, intestine, bone marrow during the first 24 h when
carbonyl labelled. Very little in mice foetuses when alcohol
labelled. No DEHA in mice after 4 d. Blood DEHA in rats 2-3 times
higher when given in DMSO than in corn oil. Sign. amount of DEHA
excreted in bile in rat when treated with DEHA in DMSO, alcohol
labelled. DEHA excreted in urine, vehicle little effect on amount
excreted. DEHA poorly absorbed from an oil solution. |
[3]
|
|
Intestinal homogenates from rats:
Hydrolysis was rapid, estimated half-life of 6.0 min. |
[3]
|
Ecotoxicity Data
|
Algae
|
Selenastrum capricornutum:
EC50(72h)>500 mg/l, EPA-600/9-78-018
EC50(96h)> 100´ Sw,
EPA-test
¨ LC50(96h)=0.78 mg/l
Scenedesmus subspicatus:
EC50(72h)>500 mg/l, DIN 38412/11
EC50(72h)=400 mg/l, DIN 38412/11 |
[1]
[10]
[11,18]
[10,16]
[10] |
Crustacean |
Daphnia magna (fw):
EC50(24h)>1000 mg/l
EC50(24h)>500 mg/l, Dir. 84/449/EEC
EC50(24h)>2.1 mg/l, DIN 38412/11
EC50(24h)>500 mg/l, OECD 202
EC0(24h)=500 mg/l, OECD 202
EC50(48h)>500 mg/l, Dir. 84/449/EEC
EC50(48h)>500 mg/l, OECD 202
LC50(48h)=0.66 mg/l (range: 0.48-0.85 mg/l)
¨ EC50(48h)=0.66 mg/l,
EPA-66013-75-009
EC0(48h)=250 mg/l, OECD 202
EC50(96h)= 0.66 mg/l, EPA-66013-75-009 |
[15]
[1]
[1]
[10,16]
[10]
[1]
[10]
[11]
[18]
[10]
[1,10] |
|
¨ NOEC(96h)<0.32 mg/l,
EPA-6603-75-009
MATC(21d)=0.024-0.052 mg/l (geometric mean 0.035 mg/l),
Reproduction test according to ASTM E 47.01 |
[1,10,18]
[1,11,10, 18] |
|
Chaetogammarus marinus (sw):
LC0(96 h)=100 mg/l |
[10]
|
|
Nitocra spinipes (sw):
LC100(96 h)<100 mg/l |
[10]
|
Fish |
Lepomis machrochirus (fw):
¨ LC50(96h) >100´ solw EPA-66013-75-009 |
[18]
|
|
Onchorhynchus mykiss (fw):
LT50(96h)=110 mg/l
¨ LC50(96h) >100´
solw,
EPA-66013-75-009
EC50(96h)=54-150mg/l |
[10]
[18]
[16]
|
|
Pimephales promelas (fw):
¨ LC50(96h) >100´
solw,
EPA-66013-75-009 |
[1,10,18]
|
|
Poecilia reticulata (fw):
LC50(96h)>100´ solw |
[10]
|
|
Salmo gairdneri (fw):
LC50(72h)>1 mg/l
LC50(96h)=54-150 mg/l
LC50(96h)>100´ solw,
EPA-66013-75-009 |
[1,10]
[1,15]
[1]
|
Bacteria |
Pseudomonas putida :
EC50>10,000 mg/l, DIN 38412
Inhibition of activated sludge:
EC20>350 mg/l , OECD 302C/209 |
[1,15,16]
[16]
|
Terrestrial organisms |
No data found |
|
Other toxicity information |
No data found |
|
Environmental Fate
|
BCF |
2700 (estimated)
2264 (estimated)
2692 (estimated)
Lepomis macrochirus (fw):
¨ 27 (28d, measured) |
[1]
[8]
[10]
[2,10,16, 18]
|
Aerobic biodegradation |
Aquatic – ready biodegradability tests:
¨ 66 % at 100 mg/l in 28 d, OECD 301 C
¨ 68 % at 100 mg/l in 28 d, OECD 301 C
<60 % in 28 d, OECD 301 C
¨ >98% in 28 d, OECD 301 F
¨ 93.8 at 20,1 mg/l in 35 d, Modified
Sturm-Test
>60% in 28 d (OECD 301)
67-74 % at 100 mg/l in 28 d, OECD 301 C |
[1,10,42]
[1,10,43]
[1]
[10,44]
[1,9,10,44
[15,16]
[17]
|
|
Aquatic – other tests:
65-81 % in 1 d, SCAS
88-96 % in 1 d, SCAS
Ca. 73 % at 20 mg/24h. in 1 d, SCAS
Ca. 92 % in at 5 mg/24h. in 1 d, SCAS
81.6 % at 37.4 mg/l in 35 d, Shake-flask-system
94% after 35 d, Sturm-test
94 % in 35 d
81.6 % in 14 d, 14 d die-away test |
[1,10]
[1,10]
[1,8,9,10]
[1,8,9,10]
[1,9,10]
[1]
[3,10]
[8]
|
|
Terrestrial environment:
> 50 % in 30 d, Sandy loam |
[10]
|
Anaerobic biodegradation |
No data found |
|
Metabolic pathway |
No data found |
|
Mobility |
Koc=50,468 |
[10] |
Conclusion |
Physical-chemical |
Reviewed data on diethylhexyl adipate (DEHA) indicates that the
substance is non-volatile and non-flammable compound with low water
solubility. Further the available data on LogPow
indicates strong lipophilicity and partitioning to particles and
biota.
DEHA has a migration potential in PVC films, which in several cases
exceeds the Danish limit of 4 mg/dm2. |
Emission |
DEHA is according to the available estimates released during
production. Concentrations |
Exposure |
DEHA has been found in the aquatic environment and in drinking
water. DEHA has also been found to migrate in food, which has been
in contact with cling films,
Patients treated using plastic tubing, which has been produced using
DEHA, could be exposed to DEHA. |
Health |
LD50 was 7,392 mg/kg bw in rat in acute oral tests.
Acute effects were not observed from DEHA in inhalation studies nor
was DEHA shown to be sensitising. DEHA was slightly irritating to
skin and eyes.
The subacute NOAEL was 610 mg/kg bw in rat and more than 3,100 ppm
in mouse.
DEHA was only slightly mutagenic in in vitro tests. Studies
on dominant lethal mutations in mouse showed a LOAEL on 450 mg/kg
bw. Metabolites showed no mutagenic effects in Ames tests with Salmonella
typhimurium.
DEHA shows limited evidence of carcinogenicity in animals (IARC,
group 3). |
|
NOAEL was 1,200 ppm for both the parent and the F0
generation in reproductive toxicity studies on mouse. The NOAEL was
170 mg/kg/d and LOAEL was 1,080 mg/kg/d to rat in reproductive
toxicity tests.
Critical effect: NOAEL, foetotoxicity was 28 mg/kg bw/d.
In rat adipic acid was the main metabolite. In human blood the main
metabolite was 2-ethylhexane acid. The metabolites
2-ethyl-5-hydroxyhexane acid, 2-ethyl-5-ketohexane acid,
2-ethyl-1,6-hexandiacid were found in human urine and
di-(2-ethylhexyl)adipate and mono-(2-ethyl-hexyl)adipate were found
in human faeces. Elimination half-life of DEHA was only 1½ hour.
Distribution of DEHA was highest in body fat, liver and kidney when
administered once intravenous or intragastrically to mouse and rat.
No DEHA was observed in mouse after 4 days. |
Environment |
According to the available biodegradation data there is good
evidence of ready biodegradability of DEHA.
In one study DEHA is very toxic to D. magna with 50%
mortality slightly below 1 mg/l. The available ecotoxicological data
on DEHA from several other experiments show no mortality in algae,
crustaceans, and three fish species at concentrations up to 100
times the water solubility of DEHA. The maximum acceptable toxicant
concentration in a chronic test on reproduction in D. magna
was 0.024-0.052 mg/l. Bioaccumulation was 27 in test with bluegills,
100 times less than predicted from LogPow. |
References
|
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2 |
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4 |
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19 |
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21 |
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22 |
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23 |
SCF (1991): Draft consolidated report of the Scientific
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24 |
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Qouted in ref. 10. |
25 |
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26 |
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27 |
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28 |
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29 |
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30 |
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31 |
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Di-(2-ethylhexyl) adipate (1991). |
32 |
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33 |
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34 |
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35 |
Tomaszewski KE et al (1986): Carcinogenesis 7 (11): 1871-6. |
36 |
Tinston DJ (1988): Di(2-ethylhexyl) adipate (DEHA): Fertility
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37 |
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Commerce, Springfield, VA. Quoted in ref. 10. |
38 |
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39 |
Cornu MC et al (1992): Biochem Pharmacol 43 (10): 2129-34. Quoted
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40 |
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41 |
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42 |
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43 |
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Chemicals & Polymers Limited dated 15. August 1990.
IUCLID Datasection 03.06.1994 |
44 |
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Unveröffentlichte Untersuchung 287356 Quoted in ref. 10. |
45 |
Saeger, V.W., Kaley II, R.G., Hicks, O., Tucker, E.S., &
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46 |
SIDS dossier Cas No. 103-23-1. HEDSET datasheet. 18 September
1998. |
O-acetyltributyl citrate
CAS number: 77-90-7
Physical-chemical, emission, exposure,
health and environment data |
Summary
Physical-chemical
Indications are available that O-acetyltributyl citrate is
non-volatile and non-flammable compound with low water solubility.
Further the available data indicates that this compound
bioaccumulates. ATBC will migrate from cling film to food.
Emission
No data found.
Exposure
Human occupational exposure may occur through inhalation of dust
particles and dermal contact when working at places where O-acetyl
tributyl citrate is handled. General exposure of the population may
occur through dermal contact with consumer products containing O-
acetyl tributyl citrate and ingestion of contaminated food.
O-acetyl tributyl citrate has been found in the aquatic environment.
Health
Sufficient data were not found.
LD50 to rat was 31,4 g/kg in acute tests which indicated
very low toxicity. O-acetyl tributyl citrate was not found to be
irritant to skin or sensitising. Moderate eye irritation has been
observed. O-acetyl tributyl citrate was not mutagenic and did not
cause chromosomal aberrations in rat lymphocytes or unscheduled DNA
synthesis in rats treated by gavage. The negative UDS study indicated
that the in vivo genotoxic potential of ATCB is low or absent
The carcinogenic potential could not be evaluated from the reviewed
study. Decreased body weights were observed in a 2-generation study
(NOAEL 100 mg/kg bw/day). Based on limited data available the critical
effect appears to be reproductive toxicity and repeated dose toxicity.
Sufficient data are not available to evaluate the classification of
the substance for all effects (EU, 1967).
Environment
Only ecotoxicological data for fish were found. Acute mortality in
two freshwater fish were 38-60 mg/l.
According to the available biodegradation data there is no evidence of
ready biodegradability of ATBC. |
|
O-acetyltributyl citrate |
Identification of the substance |
CAS No. |
77-90-7 |
|
EINECS No. |
201-067-0 |
|
EINECS Name |
Tributyl O-acetylcitrate |
|
Synonyms |
1,2,3-Propanetricarboxylic acid, 2-(acetyloxy)-tributyl ester;
acetyl tri-n-butyl citrate, acetylcitric acid tributyl ester,
blo-trol, citric avid tributyl ester acetate, citroflex A, citroflex A
4, tributyl acetylcitrate, tributyl
2-acetoxy-1,2,3-propanetricarboxylate, tributyl acetylcitrate,
tributyl O-acetylcitrate, tributyl
2-(acetyloxy)-1,2,3-propanetricarboxylic acid, tributyl acetate
|
Molecular Formula |
C20H34O8 |
|
Structural Formula |
Illustration. Structural Formula. CAS nr. 77-90-7 (2 Kb)
|
Major Uses |
Flavour ingredient
Plasticiser for vinyl resins, rubber and cellulosic resins
Plasticiser for cellulose nitrate, ethyl cellulose, polystyrene
acetate, polyvinylchloride, vinylchloride copolymers |
[3]
[3]
[3] |
IUCLID |
The substance is not included in the IUCLID HPVC list. |
|
EU classification |
The compound is not included in Annex I to 67/548/EEC |
|
Physico-chemical Characteristics |
Physical Form |
Colourless liquid |
[3,6] |
Molecular Weight (g/mole) |
¨ 402.48
402.88 |
[1]
[3] |
Melting Point/range (° C) |
¨ -80 |
[3,6] |
Boiling Point/range (° C) |
172-174 ° C at 1 mm Hg
|
[1,3,6] |
Decomposition Temperature (° C) |
No data found |
|
Vapour Pressure (mm Hg at ° C) |
¨ 1 at 173 °
C
¨ 4.6´ 10-6
(estimated)
1
5.2´ 10-2 |
[3]
[3]
[6]
[16] |
Density (g/cm3 at ° C) |
1.05
1.046 at 25° C
1.048 |
[1]
[3]
[6] |
Vapour Density (air=1) |
No data found |
|
Henry’s Law constant (atm/m3/mol at °
C) |
3.8´ 10-6 (estimated,
unknown temperature) |
[3] |
Solubility (g/l water at ° C) |
¨ 0.005 (unknown temperature)
Insoluble in water (unknown temperature) |
[3]
[6] |
Partition Coefficient (log Pow) |
¨ 4.31 (estimated) |
[3] |
pKa |
Not applicable |
|
Flammability |
No data found |
|
Explosivity |
No data found |
|
Oxidising Properties |
No data found |
|
Migration potential in polymer |
Household cling film:
Sunflower oil (10d, 40 ° C)=4.7 mg/dm2
Acetic acid (10d, 40 ° C)=2.8 mg/dm2
Migrated amount to cheese was 1-6% of plasticiser amount in film
corresponding to 0.1-0.7 mg/dm2.
PVC transfusion tubing:
Studies on the migration potential of O-acetyltributyl citrate has
shown that O-acetyltributyl citrate is extractable from PVC tubing
using distilled water as a solvent.
Extraction studies of Poretex PVC transfusion tubing resulted
O-acetyltributyl citrate concentrations after 2 h. of 100 m
g/l.
Perfusion studies of the same PVC tubing resulted in an average
O-acetyltributyl citrate concentrations (mean of extract concentration
after 2-10 h. extraction) of ~ 6 m
g/l. |
[15]
[15]
[20]
[17] |
Emission Data |
During production |
No data found |
|
Exposure Data |
Aquatic environment, incl. sediment |
O-acetyltributyl citrate was found in 2 water samples taken from
River Lee (UK) at trace levels. |
[3] |
Terrestrial environment |
No data found |
|
Sewage treatment plant |
No data found |
|
Working environment |
No data found |
|
Consumer goods |
No data found |
|
Man exposed from environment |
No data found |
|
"Secondary poisoning" |
No data found |
|
Atmosphere |
No data found |
|
Dermal |
No data found |
|
Toxicological data |
Observations in humans |
No evidence of sensitisation and irritation in a sensitisation
test. |
[22] |
|
|
Acute toxicity |
Oral |
Rats and cats
Single oral doses, 10-30 ml/kg. No marked effect observed.
¨ Rat
LD50=31.4 g/kg |
[3]
[3]
|
Dermal |
No data available |
|
Inhalation |
No data available |
|
Other routes |
¨ Rabbit
Local anaesthetic action.
Blocks neural transmission in rats when placed in contact with a nerve
trunk.
0.1 g/kg i.v. caused increased motor activity and respiration.
Unspecified dosed had a depressive effect on the blood pressure.
¨ Mouse and rat
0.4 g/kg increased respiration and induced severe signs of central
nervous system toxicity. |
[3]
[3]
[21]
[21]
|
Skin irritation |
¨ Rabbit
Not a skin irritant. |
[22]
|
Eye irritation |
¨ Rabbit
5% suspension instilled in the eye caused temporarily abolished
corneal reflex action.
¨ Rat
Moderate eye irritation. |
[21]
[22]
|
Irritation of respiratory tract |
No data available |
|
Skin sensitisation |
¨ Guinea pig
Not a sensitiser in guinea pig maximisation test. |
[22]
|
|
|
|
|
|
Subchronic and Chronic Toxicity |
Oral |
Rats
5 or 10% in the diet (6-8 w) in male rats. The lower dose had no
deleterious effect on growth whereas the high dose produced frequent
diarrhoea and markedly depressed growth.
1000 (1%), 2,700 (2.5%) and more mg/kg bw/d in the diet (4 w).
Decreased body weights and changes in organ weights from 2.5% onwards.
No effects at 1%. Range finding study.
¨ 100, 300, 1,000 mg/kg bw/d (90 d) in Wistar
rats. Haematological and biochemical changes from 300 mg/kg bw/d.
Increased lever weights at 1,000 mg/kg bw/d. NOAEL 100 mg/kg bw/d.
(OECD 408) |
[21]
[22]
[22]
|
Inhalation |
No data available |
|
Dermal |
Mice
900 mg/kg (14 d), i.p. No other effects than decreased red blood cell
count were observed. |
[3]
|
Mutagenicity, Genotoxicity and Carcinogenicity |
Mutagenicity |
Salmonella typhimurium
¨ No dose mentioned. Not mutagenic. |
[5]
|
Gene Mutation |
¨ Not mutagenic
Mouse lymphoma
No dose mentioned. Test strain: L5178Y. No gene mutations were
observed. Suspension/plate with and without metabolic activation.
Salmonella typhimurium
¨ No dose mentioned, test strain: TA98,
TA100, TA 1535, TA1537 and TA1538. No gene mutations were observed.
Standard plate with metabolic activation). Ames test. |
[3]
[5]
[5]
|
Chromosome Abnormalities |
Rats
¨ Single doses by gavage of 800 or 2,000
mg/kg did not produce unscheduled DNA systhesis.
Rat lymphocytes
¨ Dose levels not reported. No chromosomal
aberrations were observed in the absence or presence of activation. |
[22]
[22] |
Other Genotoxic Effects |
Human KB cells:
50% inhibited growth= 44.7 m g/Ml |
[3]
|
|
Monkey Vero cells:
¨ 50% inhibited growth = 39.9 m
g/mL |
[3]
|
|
Canine MDCK cells:
50% inhibited growth = 42.1 m g/mL
Rat liver microsomes:
Laurate 12-hydroxylase activity in acetyl-tributyl-citrate rats = 4,4
nmol (controls = 2.8 nmol). Cytochrome p450-mediated fatty acid
omega-hydroxylation system. |
[3]
[3]
|
Carcinogenicity
|
¨ Rat (Sherman)
0, 200, 2000, 20000 ppm (1000 mg/kg bw/d) (2 years). No significant
findings. Not according to modern guidelines. ATBC not a potent
multi-site carcinogen. |
[22]
|
Reproductive Toxicity, Embryotoxicity and
Teratogenicity |
Reproductive Toxicity |
Rat, Sprague Dawley
¨ 0, 100, 300, 1000 mg/kg bw/d in the
diet. 2-generation reproduction study (OECD 416). Decreased body
weights in F1 males from 300 mg/kg bw/d and F0 males at 1000 mg/kg
bw/d- NOAEL 100 mg/kg bw/d. |
[22]
|
Teratogenicity |
No data found |
|
Other Toxicity Studies |
No data found |
|
Toxicokinetics |
ATBC is rapidly absorbed after oral administration. Half-life = 1
hour. >67% is absorbed and primarily excreted into urine (approx.
64%). Excretion in faeces amounts to approx. 32% and 2% in air. |
[22] |
Ecotoxicity Data |
Algae |
No data found |
|
Crustacean |
No data found |
|
Fish |
Lepomis macrochirus
LC50 (96h) = 38-60 mg/l
Fundalus heteroclitus
LC50 (96h) = 59 mg/l |
[23]
[23] |
Bacteria |
No data found |
|
Terrestrial organisms |
No data found |
|
Other toxicity information |
No data found |
|
Environmental Fate |
BCF |
¨ 1,100 (estimated) |
[18] |
Aerobic biodegradation |
Aquatic – other tests:
80 % at 30 mg/l in 28 d, modified MITI Test
|
[19]
|
Anaerobic biodegradation |
No data found |
|
Metabolic pathway |
No data found |
|
Mobility |
Koc»5100 (estimated) |
[3] |
Conclusion |
Physical-chemical |
Indications are available that O-acetyltributyl citrate is
non-volatile and non-flammable compound with low water solubility.
Further the available data indicates that this compound
bioaccumulates. |
Emission |
No data available |
Exposure |
Human occupational exposure may occur through inhalation of dust
particles and dermal contact when working at places where O-acetyl
tributyl citrate is handled. General population exposure may occur
through dermal contact with consumer products containing O- acetyl
tributyl citrate and ingestion of contaminated food. O-acetyl tributyl
citrate has been found in the aquatic environment. |
Health |
Sufficient data were not found.
LD50 to rat was 31,4 g/kg in acute tests.
O-acetyl tributyl citrate was not found to be irritant to skin or
sensitising. Moderate eye irritation has been observed.
O-acetyl tributyl citrate was not mutagenic and did not cause
chromosomal aberrations in rat lymphocytes or unscheduled DNA
synthesis in rats treated by gavage. The negative UDS study indicated
that the in vivo genotoxic potential of ATCB is low or absent
The carcinogenic potential could not be evaluated from the reviewed
study.
Decreased body weights were observed in a 2-generation study (NOAEL
100 mg/kg bw/d).
Based on limited data available, the critical effect appears to be
reproductive toxicity and repeated dose toxicity.
Sufficient data are not available to evaluate the classification of
the substance for all effects (EU, 1967). |
Environment |
According to the available biodegradation data there is no evidence
of ready biodegradability of O-acetyltributyl citrate.
Acute mortality in two freshwater fish were 38-60 mg/l. |
References |
1 |
European Commission Joint Research Centre (1996): International
Uniform Chemical Information Database. IUCLID CD-ROM – Existing
Chemicals – 1996. |
2 |
Chemfinder – Cambridge Soft.
http://www.chemfinder.com |
3 |
HSDB - Hazardous Substances Data Bank
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
4 |
IRIS - Integrated Risk Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
5 |
CCRIS - Chemical Carcinogenesis Research Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
6 |
NTP – National Toxicology Program, Chemical Health & Safety
Data
http://ntp-server.niehs.nih.gov |
7 |
Genetox - Genetic Toxicology
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
8 |
Chemfate - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate
Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
9 |
Biodeg - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
10 |
Betratergremium für umweltrelevante Altstoffe (1996): Di-(2-ethylhexyl)adipat,
BUA-Stoffbericht 196. S. Hirzel, Frankfurt am Main. |
11 |
ECOTOX – US. EPA . ECOTOX database system
http://www.epa.gov |
12 |
Verschueren, K. (1996) Handbook of Environmental Data on Organic
Chemicals. 3rd Ed. Van Nostrand Reinhold. New York. |
13 |
Lide, D.R. (ed). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. 72nd
ed. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press 1991-1992. |
14 |
Petersen, J., H. (1999): Forurening af fødevarer med blødgører
– Migration fra plast og generel baggrundsforurening. Ph.D Thesis.
The Danish Veterinary and Food Administration. |
15 |
Plastindustrien i Danmark (1996): Redegørelse om phthalater i
blød PVC – Acetyl Tribtutyl Citrate Dossier for evaluation. ATBC
Industry Group (1992). pp VI |
16 |
Reilly Chemicals: CitroflexÒ - Citric
Acid Estres – Technical Bulletin 101. Received from MST (2). |
17 |
Hollingsworth, M. (1975): Pharmacologi-cal Properties of the
Plasticiser, Acetyl N-tributyl citrate, and its Extraction from
Poly(vinyl Chloride) Tubing. J. Biomed. Mater. Res. Vol. 9, pp.
687-697 |
18 |
Meyland W M, Howard P H (1995). J Pharm Sci 84: 83-92. |
19 |
Chemicals Inspection and Testing Institute (1992): Biodegradation
and bioaccumulation Data of existing Chemicals based on the CSCL
Japan. Japan Chemical Industry Ecology and Toxicology and
Information Center. ISBN 4-89074-101-1 |
20 |
Castle, L., Mercer, A.J., Startin, J.R. & Gilbert, J. (1988)
Migration from plasticised films into foods. 3. Migration of
phthalate, sebacate, citrate and phosphate esters from films used for
retail food packaging. Food Addit. Contam. 5(1), pp 9-20 |
21 |
TNO BIBRA International Ltd (1989): Toxicity profile - Acetyl
tributyl citrate. |
22 |
Scientific Committee on Toxicity, Ecotoxicity and the Environment
(CSTEE) (28 September 1999): Opinion on the toxicological
characteristict and risks of certain citrates and adipates used as a
subatitute for phthalates as plastosisers in certain soft PVC
products. |
23 |
Ecosystems Laboratory (1974) Report on the potential
environmental impact of Citroflexes. Information from Reilly
Chemicals, Oct. 2000. |
Di(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate
CAS number: 298-07-7
Physical-chemical, emission, exposure, health and
environment data |
Summary
Physical-chemical
Di(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate is a slightly flammable compound when
exposed to heat. It has a low water solubility and vapour pressure.
Emission
No data found
Exposure
No data found
Health
Inhalation of 2 ppm caused weakness, irritability and headache in
humans.
Acute oral toxicity (LD50) of di(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate to
rat was 4,940 mg /kg bw whereas the LD50 in an acute dermal
application test on rat was 1,200 mg/kg bw. The i.p. LD50 for
rat was 1,200 mg/kg bw.
Di(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate exhibit strong corrosive effect in cornea at
5 m l doses (1% solution) as well as skin
irritating effects. No mutagenic activity has been observed.
All endpoints have not been sufficiently investigated. Dermal
toxicity and local corrosive effects on skin and eyes seems to be the
most severe effects. Sufficient data are not available for
classification. DEHPA has been classified by Bayer AG in 1993 as C (Corrosive);
R34 (Causes burns) and Xn (Harmful); R21 (Harmful in
contact with skin.
No data found to determine reproductive toxicity or teratogenicity.
Environment
Conflicting data on the biodegradability of di(2-ethylhexyl)
phosphate are available. The compound is here evaluated as inherently
biodegradable.
The BCF values indicates that di(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate does not
bioaccumulate.
The available ecotoxicological data indicates that di(2-ethylhexyl)
phosphate is harmful to algae, crustaceans and fish. |
|
Di(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate |
Identification of the substance |
CAS No. |
298-07-7 |
|
EINECS No. |
206-056-4 |
|
EINECS Name |
Bis(2-ethylhexyl) hydrogen phosphate |
|
Synonyms |
Bis(2-ethylhexyl) hydrogenphosphate, Bis(2-ethylhexyl)
orthophosphoric acid, Bis(2-ethylhexyl) phosphoric acid, D2EHPA, DEHPA,
DEHPA extractant, Di-(2-ethylhexyl) acid phosphate, Di-2-ethylhexyl
hydrogen phosphate, Di-(2-ethylhexyl) phosphoric acid, Di(2-ethylhexyl)
orthophosphoric acid, Di(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate, Di-(2-ethylhexyl)
phosphoric acid, ECAID 100, 2-ethyl-1hexanol hydrogen phosphate, HDEHP,
hydrogen bis(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate, phosphoric acid bis(ethylhexyl)
ester, phosphoric acid bis(2-ethylhexyl) ester.
|
Molecular Formula |
C16H35O4P |
|
Structural Formula |
Illustration. Structural Formula. CAS nr. 298-07-7 (2 Kb)
|
Major Uses |
Additive to lubrication oils, corrosion inhibitors and antioxidants.
Metal extraction and separation.
Intermediate for wetting agents and detergents.
Extraction of drugs from aqueous phase. |
[3]
[3]
[3]
[3] |
IUCLID |
The compound is not listed as HPVC. |
|
EU classification |
The compound is not included in Annex I to 67/548/EEC |
[10] |
Physico-chemical Characteristics |
Physical Form |
Colourless Liquid |
[3,15] |
Molecular Weight (g/mol) |
322.48 |
[3] |
Melting Point/range (° C) |
-60 ° C
~ 50 ° C |
[3]
[15] |
Boiling Point/range (° C) |
¨ 48 at 12 mm Hg
Decomposition occurs prior to boiling |
[1]
[10] |
Decomposition Temperature (° C) |
240 |
[10] |
Vapour Pressure (mm Hg at ° C) |
¨ 4.65´ 10-8
(estimated)
< 0.003 |
[3]
[15] |
Density (g/cm3 at ° C) |
0.97
0.96 at 20 ° C |
[1]
[10,15] |
Vapour Density (air=1) |
No data found |
|
Henry’s Law constant (Pa/m3/mol at °
C) |
4.16´ 10-3 (estimated) |
[3] |
Solubility (g/l water at ° C) |
0.1 (20 ° C) |
[3] |
Partition Coefficient (log Pow) |
6.07 (estimated)
¨ 2.67, MITI |
[3]
[10] |
pKa |
¨ 1.72 (estimated)
2.17 (estimated) |
[10]
[10] |
Flammability |
¨ Slightly flammable when exposed to
heat. |
[3] |
Explosivity |
May form flammable hydrogen gas. |
[3] |
Oxidising Properties |
No data found |
|
Migration potential in polymer |
No data found |
|
Emission Data |
During production |
No data found |
|
Exposure Data |
Aquatic environment, incl. sediment |
No data found |
|
Terrestrial environment |
No data found |
|
Sewage treatment plant |
No data found |
|
Working environment |
No data found concerning concentration in the working environment.
Potential working groups to be exposed: workers in the radiochemical
industry where bis(2-ethylhexyl) hydrogen phosphate is used to extract
radioactive metals; workers using bis(2-ethylhexyl) hydrogen phosphate
during manufacture of certain lubricating oils, wetting agents and
detergents. |
[3]
|
Consumer goods |
No data found |
|
Man exposed from environment |
No data found |
|
"Secondary poisoning" |
No data found |
|
Atmosphere |
No data found |
|
Dermal |
Bis(2-ethylhexyl) hydrogen phosphate is a liquid used for the
extraction of heavy metals as an additive for lubricating oil and as an
intermediate for manufacture of wetting agents and detergents, the most
probable route of exposure is by skin absorption. |
[3] |
Toxicological data |
Observations in humans |
Smarting of skin and first degree burns on short exposure. May cause
second degree burn on long term exposure. Irritating to skin and eyes.
Inhalation of 2 ppm caused weakness, irritability and headache. |
[3]
[3]
|
Acute toxicity |
Oral |
Rat:
¨ LD50=4,742 mg/kg
LD50=4,940 mg/kg |
[10]
[10]
|
Dermal |
Rabbit:
¨ LD50=1,200 mg/kg bw (1.25
ml/kg; 24 h)
LD50=1,250 mg/kg bw |
[10]
[3]
|
Inhalation
|
Rat:
Saturation concentration < 1,300 mg/m3?
Dogs:
8 hours exposure of 380 ppm caused death. |
[10]
[3]
|
Other routes |
Mouse:
I.p. study. LD50= 62.5 mg/kg bw
Rat:
I.p. study. LD50= 50-100 mg/kg, 50% mortality was observed in
dose group 500 mg/kg bw. Adhesion in inner organ of animals from the 50
mg/kg bw group.
I.p. study. LD50 varied between less than 50 mg/kg to more
than 5,000 mg/kg. |
[10]
[10]
[3]
|
Skin irritation |
10 µL undiluted (24 h), 5 animals. Necrosis was observed after 24 h.
Intact skin, occlusive test.
500 µl (4-8 h). |
[10]
[10] |
Eye irritation |
Rabbit:
100 m l, 2 young animals, application in eye.
Corrosive to cornea and irritating to mucous membrane.
¨ 5 µl (1% solution) young animals. Strong
corrosive effects in cornea. |
[10]
[10]
|
Irritation of respiratory tract |
No data found |
|
Skin sensitisation |
No data found |
|
Subchronic and Chronic Toxicity |
Oral |
Rat:
Sprague Dawley rats: 0.25%, 1%, 3% (25, 100, 200 mg/kg bw) (5 d),
feed. Significant increases in the relative liver weight in the 1% and
3% dose groups. Test substance was a potent inductor of the P450b+e
system.
Mouse:
C57B1/6: 1,500 mg/kg bw (4 d), 3 animals. Significant increases
in liver weights. Increases in the perixomale enzymes carnitine
acetyltranferase and palmitoyl CoA-oxidase. |
[10]
[10]
|
Inhalation |
No data found |
|
Dermal |
No data found |
|
|
Mutagenicity, Genotoxicity and Carcinogenicity |
Mutagenicity |
Salmonella typhimurium:
¨ 4-2,500 m
g/plate, strain: TA98, TA100, TA1535, TA1537, all strain tested both
with and without metabolic activation. No mutagenicity was observed.
0.001-5 m l/plate, strain: TA98, TA100,
TA1535, TA1537, TA1538, all strain tested both with and without
metabolic activation. No mutagenicity was observed. |
[10]
[10]
|
|
Saccharomyces cerevisiae:
¨ 0.001-5 m
l/plate. Tested both with and without metabolic activation. No
mutagenicity was observed. |
[10]
|
|
Mouse lymphoma:
¨ 0.05 - 0.095 m
l/ml. No metabolic activation. No mutagenicity was observed.
¨ 0.01 - 0.095 m
l/ml. With metabolic activation. No mutagenicity was observed. |
[10]
[10]
|
Gene Mutation |
No data found |
|
Chromosome Abnormalities |
No data found |
|
Other Genotoxic Effects |
No data found |
|
Carcinogenicity |
No data found |
|
Reproductive Toxicity, Embryotoxicity and
Teratogenicity |
Reproductive Toxicity |
No data found |
|
Teratogenicity |
No data found |
|
Other Toxicity Studies |
No data found |
|
Toxicokinetics |
Toxicokinetics |
No data found |
|
|
|
Ecotoxicity Data |
Algae |
Chlorella emersonii:
Growth inhibition at conc.= 0.3-100 mg/l
¨ EC50(48h)=50-100 mg/l |
[3]
[10]
|
Crustacean |
Daphnia magna:
EC50(24h)=42.0 mg/l
LC50(24h)>42 mg/l
¨ EC50(48h)=42.0 mg/l
¨ EC50(48h)=60.7 mg/l
¨ EC50(48h)=75.0 mg/l
¨ EC50(48h)=76.9 mg/l
¨ EC50(48h)=83.7 mg/l
¨ LC50(48h) > 42 mg/l
EC50(72h)=24.5 mg/l
EC50(72h)=29.0 mg/l
EC50(72h)=30.2 mg/l
EC50(72h)=40.2 mg/l
EC50(72h)=46.8 mg/l
EC50(72h)=47.4 mg/l
EC50(72h)=47.9 mg/l
LC50(72h)=36.5 mg/l
LC50(72h)=46.8 mg/l
EC50(96h)=11.1 mg/l
EC50(96h)=12.1 mg/l
EC50(96h)=18.4 mg/l
EC50(96h)=26.0 mg/l
EC50(96h)=27.2 mg/l
EC50(96h)=28.7 mg/l
EC50(96h)=28.2 mg/l
LC50(96h)=16.5 mg/l
LC50(96h)=27.2 mg/l |
[11]
[10]
[11]
[11]
[11]
[11]
[11]
[10]
[11]
[11]
[11]
[11]
[10]
[11]
[11]
[11]
[11]
[11]
[11]
[11]
[11]
[11]
[11]
[11]
[10]
[10]
|
Other invertebrates |
No data found |
|
Fish |
Salmo gairdneri (fw):
Inhibited growth at conc.= 0.3-100 mg/l
¨ LC50(96h)=48-54 mg/l
Oncorhynchus mykiss (fw):
LC50(48h)=22-43 mg/l
¨ LC50(96h)=20-36 mg/l
LC50(120h)=20-34 mg/l
Danio rerio (fw):
¨ LC50(96h)=56 mg/l |
[3]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[11]
|
Bacteria |
Pseudomonas flourescens :
EC0(48h)=2,340 mg/l, DEV L8
Thiobacillus ferooxidans :
IC68(3h)=443 mg/l, respiration
Cellulomonas and sporocytophaga myxococcoides:
Inhibited growth at conc.= 0.3-100 mg/l |
[10]
[10]
[3]
|
Terrestrial organisms |
No data found |
|
Other toxicity information |
No data found |
|
Environmental Fate |
BCF |
37 (estimated)
Cyprius carpio (fw):
¨ 1.1-6, MITI test |
[10]
[10] |
Aerobic biodegradation |
Aquatic – ready biodegradability tests:
¨ 75 % at 100 mg/l in 28 d, modified MITI
Test
Aquatic – other tests:
¨ 0-17 % at 30 mg/l in 28 d, modified MITI
Test |
[9,10,15]
[10]
|
Anaerobic biodegradation |
No data found |
|
Metabolic pathway |
No data found |
|
Mobility |
No data found |
|
Conclusion |
Physical-chemical |
Di(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate is a slightly flammable compound when
exposed to heat with a low water solubility and vapour pressure. |
Emission |
No data found |
Exposure |
No data found |
Health |
Inhalation of 2 ppm caused weakness, irritability and headache in
humans.
Acute oral toxicity to rat expressed as LD50 was 4,940 mg
di(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate /kg bw and the LD50 in an acute
dermal application test on rat was 1,200 mg di(2-ethylhexyl)
phosphate/kg bw. The i.p. LD50 for rat was 1,200 mg
di(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate/kg bw.
Di(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate exhibit strong corrosive effect in cornea at
5 m l doses (1% solution) as well as skin
irritating effects. No mutagenic activity was observed.
All endpoints have not been sufficiently investigated. Dermal toxicity
and local corrosive effects on skin and eyes seems to be the most severe
effects. Sufficient data are not available for classification. DEHPA has
been classified by Bayer AG in 1993 as C (Corrosive); R34 (Causes
burns) and Xn (Harmful); R21 (Harmful in contact with
skin.
No data found to determine reproductive toxicity or teratogenicity. |
Environment |
Conflicting data on the biodegradability of di(2-ethylhexyl)
phosphate are available. The compound is here evaluated as inherently
biodegradable.
The BCF values indicates that di(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate does not
bioaccumulate.
The available ecotoxicological data indicates that di(2-ethylhexyl)
phosphate is harmful algae, crustaceans and fish. |
References |
1 |
European Commission Joint Research Centre (1996): International
Uniform Chemical Information Database. IUCLID CD-ROM – Existing
Chemicals – 1996. |
2 |
Chemfinder – Cambridge Soft.
http://www.chemfinder.com |
3 |
HSDB - Hazardous Substances Data Bank
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
4 |
IRIS - Integrated Risk Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
5 |
CCRIS - Chemical Carcinogenesis Research Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
6 |
NTP – National Toxicology Program, Chemical Health & Safety
Data
http://ntp-server.niehs.nih.gov |
7 |
Genetox - Genetic Toxicology
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
8 |
Chemfate - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
9 |
Biodeg - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
10 |
Betratergremium für umweltrelevante Altstoffe (1996): Di-(2-ethylhexyl)phoisphat/
Tri-(2-ethylhexyl)phoisphat, BUA-Stoffbericht 172. S. Hirzel,
Frankfurt am Main. |
11 |
ECOTOX – US. EPA . ECOTOX database system
http://www.epa.gov |
12 |
Verschueren, K. (1996) Handbook of Environmental Data on Organic
Chemicals. 3rd Ed. Van Nostrand Reinhold. New York. |
13 |
Lide, D.R. (ed). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. 72nd
ed. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press 1991-1992. |
14 |
Petersen, J., H. (1999): Forurening af fødevarer med blødgører –
Migration fra plast og generel baggrundsforurening. Ph.D Thesis. The
Danish Veterinary and Food Administration. |
15 |
Bayer A/S (1999): Sicherheitsdatenblatt – BAYSOLVEX D2EHPA. Bayer,
Leverkusen, Germany |
Tri(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate
CAS number: 78-42-2
Physical-chemical, emission, exposure, health and
environment data |
Summary
Physical-chemical
Tri(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate (TEHPA) is a slightly flammable
compound when exposed to heat. It has a low water solubility and
vapour pressure. THEPA has a high fat solubility
Emission
No data found
Exposure
TEHPA has been found fresh water, in seawater and in sewage
treatment plant influents, effluents and sludge.
TEHPA has also been found in several types of food and in drinking
water.
Health
Tri(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate appears to have only slight acute oral
toxicity. LD50 in rats was more than 37.08 g/kg and LD50
was approx. 46.0 g/kg in rabbits. In connection with inhalation the
toxicity expressed as LC50 were 450 mg/m3/30
minutes. Tri(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate produces moderate erythema in
skin irritation test and slight irritation to eyes at doses from 0.01
ml to 0.05 ml. No sufficient data were found on skin sensitisation.
In subchronic and chronic toxicity tests NOEL for TEHPA in mouse
was less than 500 mg/kg bw, NOEL for male rats was 100 mg/kg and NOEL
for rats was 430 mg/kg. In an inhalation test 10.8 mg/m3 produced high
mortality. Dose related effects on trained behaviour were observed.
TEHPA was not mutagenic and was not found genotoxic in chromosome
aberration test and micronuclei assays. Slight evidence of
carcinogenicity was observed in mouse, but it has been concluded that
the substance is not likely to cause cancer in humans. No data were
found on reprotoxicity, embryo toxicity and teratogenicity. Slight
neurotoxic effects were observed in dogs.
Based on the available data the critical effect appears to be
repeated dose toxicity after oral administration and local effects.
Bayer AG has classified TEHPA according to the substance directive in
1993 as follows: Xi (Irritant); R36/38 (Irritating to skin
and eyes).
Environment
The available data on biodegradation do not indicate that TEHPA
biodegrades readily. The only measured BCF value indicates that TEHPA
does not bioaccumulate. It should be noted that the measured Log Pow
indicates a potential for bioaccumulation. The available
ecotoxicological data indicate, that tri(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate is
harmful to algae. The avail-able data on crustaceans are insufficient
to make a classification. A low range result (10 mg/l) exists from a
ciliate test. |
Tri(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate |
Identification of the substance |
CAS No. |
78-42-2 |
|
EINECS No. |
201-116-6 |
|
EINECS Name |
Tris(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate |
|
Synonyms |
Trioctyl phosphate, phosphoric acid tris(2-ethylhexyl) ester,
2-ethylhexanol phosphate triester, 2-ethyl-1-hexanol phosphate,
triethylhexyl phosphate, TOF, Disflamoll TOF, Flexol TOF, Kronitex
TOF, NCI-C54751, TOF, tris(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate. |
Molecular Formula |
C24H51O4P |
|
Structural Formula |
Illustration. Structural Formula. CAS no. 78-42-2 (2 Kb)
|
Major Uses |
Flame retardant plasticiser for polyvinyl chloride resins.
Solvent, anti foaming agent and plasticiser.
Colour carrier in polymer colouring.
Viscosity increaser. |
[3]
[3] |
IUCLID |
The compound is not included in the IUCLID HPVC list. |
|
EU classification |
The compound is not included in Annex I to 67/548/EEC |
[10] |
Physico-chemical Characteristics |
Physical Form |
Viscous colourless liquid |
[3,15] |
Molecular Weight (g/mole) |
434.72 |
|
Melting Point/range (° C) |
-74
<70
-70 to –90 |
[3]
[15]
[10] |
Boiling Point/range (° C) |
220 at 5 mm Hg
210-220 at 37.5-49.5 mm Hg
210 at 14.8 mm Hg |
[3]
[10]
[15] |
Decomposition Temperature (° C) |
No data found |
|
Vapour Pressure (mm Hg at ° C) |
0.23 at 150 ° C
1.9 at 200 ° C
¨ 8.3´ 10-7
at 25 ° C
1.4´ 10-4 at 25 °
C |
[3]
[6]
[10]
[15] |
Density (g/cm3 at ° C) |
0.92 (unknown temperature)
0.92-0.926 (unknown temperature)
0,92 at 20 ° C |
[6]
[10]
[15] |
Vapour Density (air=1) |
No data |
|
Henry’s Law constant (atm/m3/mol at °
C) |
0.008 (estimated, unknown temperature) |
[10] |
Solubility (g/l water at ° C) |
<0.1 at 20 ° C
<0.001 at 18 ° C
< 0.0005 at 20 ° C
¨ 0.0006 at 24 °
C |
[3]
[6]
[10]
[10] |
Partition Coefficient (log Pow) |
4.23
0.8-4.22
4.22
¨ 4.1-5.04
5,04 |
[8]
[12]
[16]
[10]
[15] |
pKa |
¨ 1.72 (estimated) at 25 °
C ¨
2.12 (estimated) |
[10]
[10] |
Flammability |
Slightly flammable when exposed to heat or flame. |
[3] |
Explosivity |
No data found |
|
Oxidising Properties |
No data found |
|
Migration potential in polymer |
No data found |
|
Emission Data |
During production |
No data found |
|
Exposure Data |
Aquatic environment, incl. sediment |
Estuary 1-5 ng/l
Rw 20-290 ng/l
Sediment 2-70 m g/kg
Dw 0.3 ng/l
Fw (maximum measurements) 40-120 ng/l |
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10] |
Terrestrial environment |
No data found |
|
Sewage treatment plant |
Influent:
7-144 ng/l
Effluent:
0.5 ng/l |
[10]
[10]
|
Working environment |
Indoor, office 5-6 ng/m3 |
[10] |
Consumer goods |
No data found |
|
Man exposed from environment |
No data found |
|
"Secondary poisoning" |
Oil and grease (food for children) 38.5 m
g/kg
Meat, oil and greases 6.7 m g/kg |
[10]
[10] |
Atmosphere |
No data found |
|
Dermal |
No data found |
|
Toxicological data |
Observations in humans |
A 24 hours exposure of the underarm on six test persons did not
result in any irritation of the skin. |
[10] |
Acute toxicity |
Oral |
Tri(2-ethylhexyl)phosphate appears to have only slight acute oral
toxicity.
Mouse
LD50> 12,800 mg/kg bw |
[3]
[3]
|
|
Rat:
No specific doses and duration specified. LD50= 37 g/kg.
LD50> 2,000 mg/kg bw
¨ LD50= 37,080 mg/kg bw
LD50= 39,800 mg/kg bw
¨ 18,400 and 36,800 mg/kg bw. Mortality in
animals dosed 18,400 mg/kg bw where 1 of 6 animals died and in dose
group 36,800 mg/kg bw where 2 of 6 animals died.
LD50>9,200 mg/kg bw (> 10 ml/kg bw)
Rabbit:
No doses specified, gavage. LD50 approx. 46.0 g/kg.
No specific doses and duration specified. LD50= 46 g/kg.
¨ LD50= 46,000 mg/kg bw |
[10]
[10]
[10, 17]
[10]
[6,10]
[10]
[3]
[6]
[10]
|
Dermal |
Rabbit:
No specific doses and duration specified. LD50= 20 g/kg.
LD50= 18,400 mg/kg bw |
[6]
[10]
|
Inhalation |
Rat
¨ 450 mg/m3. No mortality was
observed.
Rat and rabbit:
Dose and duration not specified. No toxic effects were observed.
Guinea pig:
No specific doses and duration specified. LD50= 450 mg/m3/30
minutes.
¨ 448 mg/m3 (1,5 h), average
particle size=1.5µm. 6 of 10 animals died. |
[10]
[3]
[6,10]
[10] |
Other routes |
Mouse
¨ LD50= 7,200 mg/kg bw, route
unknown.
Rat and rabbit:
Dose and duration not specified, intravenously. No toxic effects were
observed.
Dose and duration not specified, intratracheally. No toxic effects
were observed.
Rabbit
¨ 358 mg/kg bw. 2 of 6 animals died.
1,811 mg/kg bw. 1 of 6 animals died in the dose range from 690 to
1,811 mg/kg bw. |
[10]
[3]
[3]
[10]
[10]
|
Skin irritation |
Rat and rabbit
Single application of TEHPA resulted in hyperglycemia, reduced growth
of hair, hair loss and dryness of the skin.
Rabbit
¨ 250 mg (24 h) applied to shaved skin.
Moderate erythema was observed within 24 h and lasted one week.
No dose specified (24 h), occlusive application in ear. Swelling and
redness of skin.
¨ 10-20 ml, single application on skin on
the back of young rabbits. Mortality was observed after single
application of test substance.
No evidence of systematic intoxication. |
[10]
[3,10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
|
Eye irritation |
Rabbit
No dose specified (24 h). Rated one on a numerical scale from 1 to 10
according to degree of injury. Particular attention to condition of
cornea. Most severe injury observed was rated 10.
0.1-0.5 ml (24 h), young animals tested. Moderate conjunctivitis that
cleared up after 24 h.
¨ 0.01-0.05 ml application in eye of young
animals. Light irritation was observed.
Dose not specified, young animals tested. Flood of tears, darkening of
the cornea and hair loss in the eye surroundings.
No evidence of systematic intoxication. |
[3]
[3,10]
[10]
[10]
[3]
|
Irritation of respiratory tract |
No data found. |
|
Skin sensitisation |
Guinea pig
Not sensitising. |
[10]
|
Subchronic and Chronic Toxicity |
Oral |
Of low toxicity to mice and rat |
[10] |
|
Mouse:
Up to 3,000 mg/kg bw (14 d) oral probe. No toxic effects were
observed.
¨ B6C3F1 mice: 0, 500,
1,000, 2,000, 4,000, 8,000 mg/kg bw/d (13 w, 5 d/w) oral probe.
NOEL<500 mg/kg bw. Gastritis was dose dependent and lowest dose
observation was in the 500 mg/kg bw group and isolated incidences of
ulceration was observed in dose groups from 2,000 mg/kg bw group.
Decrease in bw was observed in the female 4,000 mg/kg bw dose group
and in the male 8,000 mg/kg bw.
B6C3F1 mice: 0, 375, 750, 1,500, 3,000, 6,000 mg/kg bw/d
(14 d) 5 animals/sex/dose group, oral probe. NOEL = 3,000 mg/kg bw.
Decrease in bw in 6,000 mg/kg bw males and in 3,000 mg/kg bw females.
Decreased activity and raw throat.
Rat:
Fisher 344 rats: 0, 375, 750, 1,500, 3,000, 6,000 mg/kg bw/d
(14 d) 5 animals/sex/dose group, oral probe. NOEL, males =750 mg/kg
bw. Decrease in bw in 1,500 mg/kg bw males and in 3,000 mg/kg bw
females after 14 d.
¨ (Crj: CD(SD)) rats: 30, 100, 300,
1,000 mg/kg bw/d (28 d, thereafter 14 d observation) 6
animals/sex/dose group, oral probe. NOEL=100 mg/kg bw. 300 mg/kg bw
females had decreased prothrombin time and decreased partial
thromboplastin time in 1,000 males. Decrease in serum choline esterase
activity in male 300 mg/kg.
¨ Sherman rats: 110-1,550 mg/kg
bw/d (30 d) 5 animals/sex/dose group. NOEL 430 mg/kg bw. Decrease in
bw in the 1,550 dose groups (LOEL).
0, 250, 500, 1,000, 2,000, 4,000 mg/kg bw/d (13 w) 10 animals/sex/dose
group, oral probe. NOEL, female =1,000 mg/kg bw. Decrease in growth
was observed in the female 2,000 mg/kg bw dose group and in the male
4,000 mg/kg bw after 13 w. |
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[3,10]
[10] |
Inhalation |
Rat:
0.23, 0.63 mg/m3 (16 w, 4 h/d) 30 females. Dose group 0.23
mg/m3 showed decrease in choline esterase activity in
blood. Decrease in Beta-globuline in serum. Dose group 0.63 mg/m3
showed change in content of hippurie acid in the leucocyte number. The
study does not comply with OECD study criteria. |
[10]
|
|
Guinea pig:
Hartley: 1.6, 9.6 mg/m3 (12 w, 5 d/w, 6 h/d), 20
males, average particle size = 3.8 µm. Decrease in kidney weight.
Increased bw in 9.6 mg/m3. Several histopathological
changes. Several other observations but the study does not comply with
modern study criteria.
¨ 10.8, 26.4, 85 mg/m3 (12 w, 5
d/w, 6 h/d), 10 animals/dose group, average particle size = 4.4 µm.
High mortality in all dose groups due to lung infections. Increase in
relative lung and kidney weights in the highest dose groups.
Dog:
10.8, 26.4, 85 mg/m3 (12 w, 5 d/w, 6 h/d), 1
animal/sex/dose group, average particle size = 4.4 µm. Minor chronic
infection in lungs. Slight behavioural changes.
Monkey:
Rhesus: 10.8, 26.4, 85 mg/m3 (12 w, 5 d/w, 6 h/d), 1
animal/sex/dose group, average particle size = 4.4 µm. No effects
were observed. |
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
|
Dermal |
Rabbit:
92 mg/animals/d (5 d/w, observation period after treatment: 3-17 d) 10
and 20 applications. Hyperkeratose, mild parakeratose, acute
dermatitis and mild thickening of the epidermis. The effects
disappeared 17 days after the 10th application. No systemic
changes. |
[10]
|
Other routes |
Chicken:
Doses not specified, route and duration unspecified. No demyelinating
action found. Positive control: Tri-ortho-cresyl phosphate.
Doses not specified, route and duration not specified. No
neuropathological or inhibition of cholineesterase.
Cat:
920 mg/kg bw/d (1 ml/kg bw)(4 w, 5 d/w), 2 cats. No decrease in the
cholineesterase activity in the erythrocytes.
Dog:
¨ Doses not specified, route and duration
unspecified. Dose related effect on trained behaviour of dogs.
Monkey:
Doses not specified, route and duration unspecified. No effect on
trained behaviour of monkeys. |
[3]
[3]
[10]
[3]
[3]
|
Mutagenicity, Genotoxicity and Carcinogenicity |
Mutagenicity |
Salmonella typhimurium :
No dose specified, strain indicators: TA98, TA100, TA1535, TA1537.
Not mutagenic. All strains tested both with and without metabolic
activation.
100-10,000 m g/plate, strain: TA98, TA100,
TA1535, TA1537. Not mutagenic. All strains tested both with and
without metabolic activation.
¨ 20-12,500 m
g/plate, strain: TA98, TA100, TA1535, TA1537. Not mutagenic. All
strains tested both with and without metabolic activation.
100-10,000 m g/plate, strain: TA98, TA100,
TA1535, TA1537. Not mutagenic. All strains tested both with and
without metabolic activation.
312.5-5,000 m g/plate, strain: TA98, TA100,
TA1535, TA1537. Not mutagenic. All strains tested both with and
without metabolic activation.
Escherichia coli :
¨ 312.5-5,000 m
g/plate. Not mutagenic. All strains tested both with and without
metabolic activation.
Mouse lymphoma :
¨ Up to 74.1 m
l/ml. All strains tested both with and without metabolic activation.
No metabolic activation.
Drosophila melanogaster :
¨ 50,000 ppm in a sugar solution (3
d). No sex-linked recessive lethal mutations.
50,000 ppm in 0.7% NaCl, injection. No sex-linked recessive lethal
mutations. |
[3,5]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10] |
Gene Mutation |
No data found |
|
Chromosome Abnormalities |
CHO:
Up to 1670 m g/ml. No chromosome
aberration.
Up to 839 m g/ml. No sister chromatide
exchange.
CHL:
3 -11 m g/ml. No chromosome aberration. No
metabolic activation system.
1,100 -4,400 m g/ml. No chromosome
abbreviation. No metabolic activation system. |
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
|
Other Genotoxic Effects |
Mouse:
0, 500, 1,000, 1,500, 2,000, 3,000 mg/kg bw (3 d) daily i.p. No
micronuklei observed.
Rat:
0, 0.25, 0.50 mg/lair (2 w, 5 d/w, 6 h/d) altogether 9 exposures. No
micronuclei observed.
Chicken:
Doses not specified. No demyelinating action found. Positive control:
Tri-ortho-cresyl phosphate.
Doses not specified. No neuropathological or inhibition of
cholineesterase. |
[10]
[10]
[3]
[3]
|
Carcinogenicity
|
Mouse:
B6C3F1 mice: 500 and 1,000 mg/kg bw; (103 w, 5 d/w), 50
animal/dose group, in corn oil by gavage. Increased incidence of
folicular cell hyperplasia of the thyroid. In females significant
increase of hepatocellular carcinomas in the high dose group. Decrease
in hemangiosarcomas of the circulatory system in males and
hematopoietic system in females. Some incidence of carcinogenicity in
the 1,000 mg/kg female group. No evidence of carcinogenicity in males.
¨ B6C3F1 ♀ mice 0, 500 and
1,000 mg/kg bw (102-104 w) females, in corn oil by gavage, 5 d/w.
Carcinoma and adenoma in liver. Evidence of carcinogenicity.
Rat:
Fisher 344 rats: 2,000, 4,000 mg/kg bw male; 1,000, 2,000 mg/kg
bw female; (103 w, 5 d/w), 50 animals/dose group, in corn oil by
gavage. Results - male: Bw gain was depressed. Dose related increase
in pheochromocytoma of adrenal glands. 2 malignant pheochromocytoma in
the high dose group. High increase compared to control, but incidence
in this group unusually low. Decreased incidence of acinar cell adomas
of the pancreas. Evidence of carcinogenicity was equivocal in dose
group 2,000 and 4,000 mg/kg. Results - female: Decreased incidence of
fibroadenomas of mammary glands in low dose groups. No evidence of
carcinogenicity in female rats.
0, 2,000, 4,000 mg/kg bw (102-104 w), males, in corn oil by gavage, 5
d/w. Results: No evidence of carcinogenicity.
0, 1,000, 2,000 mg/kg bw (102-104 w), males, in corn oil by gavage, 5
d/w. Results: No evidence of carcinogenicity. |
[3,5,6,10]
[5]
[3,5,6,10]
[5]
[5]
|
|
Human:
Based on the slight carcinogenicity and no mutagenicity and
genotoxicity, TEPH is evaluated as unlikely to be carcinogenic to
humans by an ECETOC working group. |
[10]
|
Reproductive Toxicity, Embryotoxicity and
Teratogenicity |
Reproductive Toxicity |
No data found. |
|
Teratogenicity |
No data found. |
|
Other Toxicity Studies |
No data found. |
|
Neurotoxicity and Toxicokinetics
|
Neurotoxicity |
Chicken:
500, 2,500 mg/kg bw, 8 animals. Result: One animal of 8 died in the
high dose group.
250, 500, 2,500 mg/kg bw. Result: No observed effects.
Dog and monkey:
¨ 10.8, 26.4, 85 mg/m3 (12 w, 6
h/d, 5 d/w) 2 animals/dose group. Result: Dog - Decreased results of
the multiple stimuli conditioned avoidance test. Monkey - no effects
were observed in the ability of visual discrimination. |
[10]
[10]
[10] |
Toxicokinetics |
Rat:
¨ TEHPA metabolised to at least one other
compound. |
[3]
|
Other effects |
HeLa cell:
144 and 320 mg/ml. Result: No effects observed in the low dose group.
TEHPA precipitated at 320 mg/ml. Metabolic inhibition test.
|
|
Ecotoxicity Data |
Algae |
Chlorella emersonii:
¨
EC50(48h) =50-100 mg/l |
[10] |
Crustacean |
Culex tarsalis:
LC50(24h)>1 mg/l
Daphnia magna:
EC50(48h)>0,08 mg/l |
[10]
[15]
|
Fish |
Brachydanio rerio (fw):
LC0(96h) >100 mg/l |
[12,15]
|
Bacteria |
Activated sludge:
EC50(3h)>100 mg/l |
[15]
|
Terrestrial organisms |
No data found. |
|
Other toxicity information |
Tetrahymena pyriformis:
¨ EC50(24h) =10 mg/l |
[18]
|
Environmental Fate |
BCF |
251 (estimated)
251-3,837 (estimated)
¨ 2.4-22 Cyprius carpio, MITI
2-22 (42h) |
[10]
[10]
[19]
[15] |
Aerobic biodegradation |
Aquatic – ready biodegradability tests:
¨ 0 % at 100 mg/l, in 28 d, OECD 301C
¨ 0 % at 4.76 mg/l, in 28 d, OECD 301D
Aquatic – other tests:
40-60 % in 2 d, activated sludge
20 % in 1 d, activated sludge
20 % in 1 d, adapted activated sludge
0-90 % at 3.22 mg/l, in 30 d, RDA
0 % in 28 d, waste water
55 % in 2 d, activated sludge
60 % in 2 d, adapted activated sludge
20 % at 2 mg/l/24h, in 238 d, SCAS
0 % at 100 mg/l in 28 d, SCAS
0 % at 8 mg/kg in 7 d, mesophile sludge stabilisation
20.4-35.9 % at 1-20 mg/l in 7 d, river water
20.0-42.2 % at 1-20 mg/l in 14 d, river water
65.5 % at 1-20 mg/l in 15 d, river water
9.9 % at 1 mg/l in 7 d, sea water
1.2 % at 1 mg/l in 8 d, sea water
32.5-73.2 % at 1 mg/l in 14 d, sea water
12-28 % at 3-13 mg/l/24h, in 34 d, SCAS |
[19]
[19]
[9]
[9]
[9]
[9,10]
[9]
[12]
[12]
[10,12]
[10,12]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[10]
[16]
|
Anaerobic biodegradation |
25 % at 1.4 mg/l in 70 d, mesophile sludge stabilisation. |
[10] |
Metabolic pathway |
No data found. |
|
Mobility |
No data found. |
|
Conclusion |
Physical-chemical |
Tri(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate (TEHPA) is a slightly flammable
compound when exposed to heat. It has a low water solubility and
vapour pressure. THEPA has a high fat solubility |
Emission |
No data found. |
Exposure |
TEHPA has been found fresh water, in seawater and in sewage
treatment plant influents, effluents and sludge.
TEHPA has also been found in several types of food and in drinking
water. |
Health |
Tri(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate appears to have only slight acute oral
toxicity. LD50 was more than 37 g/kg in rats and approx. 46
g/kg in rabbits. In connection with inhalation the toxicity expressed
as LD50 were 450 mg/m3/30 minuttes.
Tri(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate produces moderate erythema in skin
irritation test and slight irritation to eyes at doses from 0.01 ml to
0.05 ml. No sufficient data were found on skin sensitisation.
In subchronic and chronic toxicity tests NOEL for TEHPA in mouse
was less than 500 mg/kg bw, NOEL for male rats was 100 mg/kg and NOEL
for rats was 430 mg/kg. In an inhalation test 10.8 mg/m3
produced high mortality. Dose related effects on trained behaviour
were observed.
TEHPA was not mutagenic and was not found genotoxic in chromosome
aberration test and micronuclei assays. Slight evidence of
carcinogenicity was observed in mouse. No data were found on
reprotoxicity, embryo toxicity and teratogenicity. Slight neurotixic
effects were observed in dogs.
Based on the slight carcinogenicity and no mutagenicity and
genotoxicity, TEPHA is evaluated as unlikely to be carcinogenic to
humans by an ECOTOC working group.
Based on the available data the critical effect appears to be
repeated dose toxicity after oral administration and local effects.
TEHPA has been classified according to the substance directive by
Bayer AG in 1993 as follows: Xi (Irritant); R36/38 (Irritating
to skin and eyes). |
Environment |
The available data on biodegradation do not indicate
that TEHPA biodegrades readily.
The only measured BCF value indicates that TEHPA does not
bioaccumulate. It should be noted that the measured Log Pow
indicates a potential for bioaccumulation.
The available ecotoxicological data indicate, that tri(2-ethylhexyl)
phosphate is harmful to algae. The available data on crustaceans are
insufficient to make a classification. A low range result (10 mg/l)
exists from a ciliate test. |
References |
1 |
European Commission Joint Research Centre (1996): International
Uniform Chemical Information Database. IUCLID CD-ROM – Existing
Chemicals – 1996. |
2 |
Chemfinder – Cambridge Soft.
http://www.chemfinder.com |
3 |
HSDB - Hazardous Substances Data Bank
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
4 |
IRIS - Integrated Risk Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
5 |
CCRIS - Chemical Carcinogenesis Research Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
6 |
NTP – National Toxicology Program, Chemical Health & Safety
Data
http://ntp-server.niehs.nih.gov |
7 |
Genetox - Genetic Toxicology
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
8 |
Chemfate - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate
Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
9 |
Biodeg - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
10 |
Betratergremium für umweltrelevante Altstoffe (1996): Di-(2-ethylhexyl)phoisphat/
Tri-(2-ethylhexyl)phoisphat, BUA-Stoffbericht 172. S. Hirzel,
Frankfurt am Main. |
11 |
ECOTOX – US. EPA . ECOTOX database system
http://www.epa.gov |
12 |
Verschueren, K. (1996) Handbook of Environmental Data on Organic
Chemicals. 3rd Ed. Van Nostrand Reinhold. New York. |
13 |
Lide, D.R. (ed). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. 72nd
ed. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press 1991-1992. |
14 |
Petersen, J., H. (1999): Forurening af fødevarer med blødgører
– Migration fra plast og generel baggrundsforurening. Ph.D Thesis.
The Danish Veterinary and Food Administration. |
15 |
Bayer A/S (1999): Sicherheitsdatenblatt – DISFLAMOLL TOF. Bayer,
Leverkusen, Germany |
16 |
Saeger, V.W., Kaley II, R.G., Hicks, O., Tucker, E.S., &
Mieure, J.P. (1976): Acti-vated sludge degradation of selected
phosphate esters. Environ. Sci. Technol. 13, 840-482. |
17 |
MacFARLAND, H.N. et al (1966): Toxicological Studies on
Tri-(2-Ethylhexyl)-Phosphate. Arch Environ Health-Vol 13, July 1966. |
18 |
Yoshioka,Y., Ose, Y., & Sato, T. (1985): Testing for the
Toxicity of Chemicals with Tetrahymena pyriformis. Sci. Total
Environ. 43(1-2): 149-157. |
19 |
Chemicals Inspection and Testing Institute (1992); Biodegradation
and bioaccumulation Data of existing Chemicals based on the CSCL
Japan. Japan Chemical Industry Ecology and Toxicology and
Information Center. ISBN 4-89074-101-1. |
Tri-2-ethylhexyl trimellitate
CAS number: 3319-31-1
Physical-chemical, emission, exposure, health and
environment data |
Summary
Physical-chemical
Tri-2-ethylhexyl trimellitate is a compound with low water
solubility and, low vapour pressure a high fat solubility. Migration
from PVC to sunflower oil, isooctane or ethanol was 1,280; 1,220 and
450 mg/dm2 respectively, which is relatively high.
Emission
No data found
Exposure
No data found
Health
Sufficient data were not found for a profound assessment but data
indicate that the substance is moderately irritating towards skin,
eyes and respiratory tract and harmful by inhalation.
Concerning sensitisation animal experiments indicate that it does
not induce sensitisation in Guinea-pigs.
Data on mutagenicity indicate that tri-2-ethylhexyl trimellitate is
not mutagenic to Salmonella typhimurium.
The identified critical effect is related to systemic effects from
inhalation of the substance. Based on the available information
tri-2-ethylhexyl trimellitate should be classified Xn (Harmful);
R20 (dangerous by inhalation).
Environment
The available data indicate that tri-2-ethylhexyl trimellitate does
not biodegrade readily or inherently.
The only available measured Log Pow value, indicates that
tri-2-ethylhexyl trimellitate bioaccumulates.
The available acute 50 % effect concentrations are all given as
ranges, and it therefore not possible to evaluate the acute
ecotoxicity of tri-2-ethylhexyl trimellitate. A NOEC based on chronic
data for crustaceans was 0.082 mg/l. |
|
Tri-2-ethylhexyl trimellitate |
Identification of the substance |
CAS No. |
3319-31-1 |
|
EINECS No. |
222-020-0 |
|
EINECS Name |
Tris(2-ethylhexyl) benzene-1,2,4-tricarboxylate |
|
Synonyms |
Tris(2-ethylhexyl) trimellitate, trioctyl, trimellitate
tris(2-ethylhexyl) ester, Kodaflex TOTM, tri(2-ethylhexyl)trimellitate
ester, 2-ethylhexyl trimellitate,
tris(2-ethylhexyl)benzenetricarboxylate, Bisoflex TOT,
tri-2-ethylhexyl trimellitate. |
Molecular Formula |
C33H54O6 |
|
Structural Formula |
Illustration. Structural Formula. CAS no. 3319-31-1 (3 Kb)
|
Major Uses |
No data found |
|
IUCLID |
The substance is included in the IUCLID HPVC list. |
|
EU classification |
The compound is not included in Annex I to 67/548/EEC |
|
Physico-chemical Characteristics |
Physical Form |
Yellow oily liquid |
[6] |
Molecular Weight (g/mole) |
546.79 |
|
Melting Point/range (° C) |
-35 – -30 ° C |
[1a] |
Boiling Point/range (° C) |
414 |
[15] |
Decomposition Temperature (° C) |
No data found |
|
Vapour Pressure (mm Hg at ° C) |
¨ 5.5´ 10-5
at 20 ° C
3.94´ 10-11 |
[1a]
[15] |
Density (g/cm3 at ° C) |
0.985-0.992 at 20 ° C
0.989 (unknown temperature) |
[1a]
[2] |
Vapour Density (air=1) |
No data found |
|
Henry’s Law constant (atm/m3/mol at °
C) |
4.45´ 10-7 (estimated,
unknown temperature) |
[8,15] |
Solubility (g/l water at ° C) |
<1 mg/l at 20 ° C
¨ 0.00039 mg/l at 25 °
C
0.1 mg/l at 25 o C |
[1a,6]
[1a]
[15] |
Partition Coefficient (log Pow) |
¨ 4.35 at 25 °
C
12.41 (estimated)
11.59 (estimated) |
[1a]
[8]
[15] |
pKa |
No data found |
|
Flammability |
No data found |
|
Explosivity |
No data found |
|
Oxidising Properties |
No data found |
|
Migration potential in polymer |
¨ Migration from PVC to sunflower oil,
isooctane or ethanol was 1,280; 1,220 and 450 mg/dm2
respectively in studies over 1-3 days at the same, corresponding to
30-80% of the total TETM amount in the PVC piece. |
|
Emission Data |
During production |
No data found |
|
Exposure Data |
Aquatic environment, incl. sediment |
No data found |
|
Terrestrial environment |
No data found |
|
Sewage treatment plant |
No data found |
|
Working environment |
No data found |
|
Consumer goods |
No data found |
|
Man exposed from environment |
No data found |
|
"Secondary poisoning" |
No data found |
|
Atmosphere |
No data found |
|
Dermal |
No data found |
|
Toxicological data |
Observations in humans |
Mist and fumes from hot processing may cause irritation to eyes,
nose throat and upper respiratory tract, nausea and vomiting.
Significant absorption through the skin is unlikely. |
[1a, 17] |
Acute toxicity |
Oral |
Rat
LD50 rat >3.2 g/kg bw.
LD50 rat = 9850 mg/kg bw
Mouse
LD50 mouse > 3.2 g/kg bw. |
[1, 17]
[1a]
[1a, 17]
|
Dermal |
Rabbit
LD50 (24 hour covered) >1.98 g/kg bw
LD50 (OECD 402/1981) > 1.97 g/kg bw |
[17]
[1a]
|
Inhalation |
Rat:
¨ LC50 = 2.6 mg/l (4 hours) |
[1a]
|
|
¨ Moderate irritation resulted from a 6
hours exposure to 16 ppm (probably in rats) but a concentration on
2640 mg/m3 in 6 hours exposure caused severe irritation
(probably the respiratory tract) and death. No death occurred at a
concentration equal to 230 mg/m3. |
[17] |
Other routes |
Rat
i.p LD50 > 3200 mg/l
Mouse
i.p LD50 > 3200 mg/l |
[1a]
[1a]
|
Skin irritation |
Rabbit
0.5 ml neat substance (occlusive, 4 hours). Slightly irritating, not
classifiable. (OECD 404/1984)
0.5 ml neat substance (occlusive 24 hours). Slightly irritating, not
classifiable. (FHSAR - 16FSR)
Guinea pig
0.5 ml neat substance (occlusive, 24 hours). Slightly irritating.
0.5 ml neat substance (occlusive, 24 hours). Not irritating. (Buehler) |
[1a]
[1a]
[1a]
[1a] |
Eye irritation |
Rabbit
0.1 ml. Slightly irritating, not classifiable. (OECD 405/1984)
0.1 ml neat substance. Slightly irritating, not classifiable. (FHSAR -
16FSR) |
[1a]
[1a] |
Irritation of respiratory tract |
Rats exposed to an estimated concentration of 230 mg/m3
for 6 hr. showed minimal irritation.
See also "Inhalation" |
[17] |
Skin sensitisation |
Guinea pig
0.5 ml neat substance (occlusive, 24 hours, 10 applications).
Challenge after 2 weeks. Not sensitising. (OECD 406/1981) |
[1a, 17] |
Subchronic and Chronic Toxicity |
Oral |
Rat
¨ Fisher 344: 0, 0.2% (184 mg/kg
bw/d), 0.67% (650 mg/kg bw/d) and 2% (1826 mg/kg bw/d) in diet for 28
days. LOAEL = 184 mg/kg bw. Slightly increased liver weights and liver
enzymes, decreased erythrocytes, increased leucocytes, and raised
cholesterole levels at 0.67%. Increased palmitoyl CoA at 0.2%. Slight
peroxisome proliferation at 2%. |
[1a]
|
|
Fisher 344: 0, 200 mg/kg bw/d, 700 mg/kg
bw/d and 2000 mg/kg bw/d per gavage for 21 days. LOAEL = 200 mg/kg bw.
Slight increase in hepatic peroxisomes in males at top dose level.
Increased enzyme activity in males and females at 200 and 2000 mg/kg
bw. |
[1a]
|
|
Fisher 344: 0 and 1000 mg/kg bw/d per
gavage for 28 days. LOAEL = 1000 mg/kg bw. Non-significant liver
effects. |
[1a]
|
|
(Albino rats) 0 and 985 mg/kg bw/d injections for 7 days. No
effects. NOAEL = 985 mg/kg bw. |
[1a] |
|
Mouse
14 and 42 mg/kg bw/d injections for 14 days. Increased relative spleen
and liver weights in top dose group. LOAEL = 42 mg/kg bw. (Limited
data)
Dog
14 and 42 mg/kg bw/d injections for 14 days. Increased relative spleen
and liver weights in top dose group. LOAEL = 42 mg/kg bw. (Limited
data) |
[1a]
[1a]
|
Inhalation |
No relevant data found. |
|
Dermal |
No relevant data found. |
|
Mutagenicity, Genotoxicity and Carcinogenicity |
Mutagenicity |
Salmonella typhimurium :
¨ 0, 100, 333, 1000, 3333, 10000 m
g/plate. Test strain: TA100, TA1535, TA97 or TA 98. No mutagenicity
was observed. Ames, pre-incubation, test with and without metabolic
activation.
Neat urine from male Sprague-Dawley rats gavaged daily for 15 days
with 2 g/kg bw. Test strain: TA97, TA98, TA 100 or TA1535. No
mutagenicity was observed. Ames with and without metabolic activation.
Chinese hamster ovary cells:
¨ 5 - 200 nl/ml (6 concentrations).
Unschedules DNA synthesis without metabolic activation. No
mutagenicity observed.
Primary rat hepatocytes:
¨ 250 - 5000 nl/ml. HGPRT assay with and
without metabolic activation. No indication of UDS observed. |
[1a]
[1a]
[1a]
[1a]
|
|
A dose of approximately 1400 mg/kg bw was not mutagenic in a
dominant lethal test in mice. |
[1a, 17] |
Chromosome Abnormalities |
No relevant data found. |
|
Other Genotoxic Effects |
No relevant data found. |
|
Carcinogenicity |
Mouse (strain A):
Approx. 1400 mg/kg bw (possibly per day). Tests in mouse with a
propensity to form pulmonary adenoms were negative. No further
details. |
[1a]
|
Reproductive Toxicity, Embryotoxicity and
Teratogenicity |
Reproductive Toxicity |
No relevant data found. |
|
Teratogenicity |
No relevant data found. |
|
Other Toxicity Studies |
No relevant data found. |
|
Toxicokinetics
|
Toxicokinetics |
Metabolic studies in rats have shown that following the
administration of 100 mg/kg bw by stomach tube , about 64% was
excreted unchanged in the faeces, 11% and 16% were excreted as
metabolites in the faeces and urine respectively, and less than 0.6%
remained in the tissues after 6 days. |
[1a, 17]
|
Is the substance given intravenously, it will mainly accumulate in
the liver (72%), lungs and spleen. |
[1a]
Ecotoxicity Data |
Algae |
No data found. |
|
Crustacean |
Daphnia magna (fw):
EC50(48h)>1 mg/l
¨ NOEC(21d)<= 0.082 mg/l |
[1a]
[1a]
|
Fish |
Salmo gairdneri (fw):
LC50(96h)>1 mg/l |
[1a]
|
Bacteria |
No data found. |
|
Terrestrial organisms |
No data found. |
|
Other toxicity information |
No data found. |
|
Environmental Fate |
BCF |
No data found. |
|
Aerobic biodegradation |
Aquatic – ready biodegradability tests:
¨ 14 % at 100 mg/l in 28 d, OECD 301 C
Aquatic – other tests:
4.2 % at 30 mg/l in 28 d, OECD 301C or 302C |
[1a]
[16]
|
Anaerobic biodegradation |
No data found. |
|
Metabolic pathway |
No data found. |
|
Mobility |
No data found. |
|
Conclusion |
Physical-chemical |
Tri-2-ethylhexyl trimellitate is a compound with low water
solubility and, low vapour pressure a high fat solubility. Migration
from PVC to sunflower oil, isooctane or ethanol was 1,280; 1,220 and
450 mg/dm2 respectively, which is relatively high. |
Emission |
No data found. |
Exposure |
No data found. |
Health |
Not sufficient data. Data on mutagenicity indicate that
tri-2-ethylhexyl trimellitate is not mutagenic to Salmonella
typhimurium.
The identified critical effect is related to systemic effects from
inhalation of the substance.
Classification Based on the available information TETM should be
classified Xn (Harmful); R20 (dangerous by inhalation). |
Environment |
The available data indicate that tri-2-ethylhexyl trimellitate does
not biodegrade readily or inherently.
The only available measured Log Pow value, indicates that
tri-2-ethylhexyl trimellitate bioaccumulates.
The available acute 50 % effect concentrations are all given as
ranges, and it therefore not possible to evaluate the acute
ecotoxicity of tri-2-ethylhexyl trimellitate. A NOEC based on chronic
data for crustaceans was 0.082 mg/l. |
References
|
1 |
European Commission Joint Research Centre (1996): International
Uniform Chemical Information Database. IUCLID CD-ROM – Existing
Chemicals – 1996. |
1a |
European Commission Joint Research Centre (2000): International
Uniform Chemical Information Database. IUCLID CD-ROM. Year 2000
Edition. ISBN 92-828-8641-7. |
2 |
Chemfinder – Cambridge Soft.
http://www.chemfinder.com |
3 |
HSDB - Hazardous Substances Data Bank
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
4 |
IRIS - Integrated Risk Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
5 |
CCRIS - Chemical Carcinogenesis Research Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
6 |
NTP – National Toxicology Program, Chemical Health & Safety
Data
http://ntp-server.niehs.nih.gov |
7 |
Genetox - Genetic Toxicology
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
8 |
Chemfate - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate
Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
9 |
Biodeg - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
10 |
Betratergremium für umweltrelevante Altstoffe (1996): Di-(2-ethylhexyl)adipat,
BUA-Stoffbericht 196. S. Hirzel, Frankfurt am Main. |
11 |
ECOTOX – US. EPA . ECOTOX database system
http://www.epa.gov |
12 |
Verschueren, K. (1996) Handbook of Environmental Data on Organic
Chemicals. 3rd Ed. Van Nostrand Reinhold. New York. |
13 |
Lide, D.R. (ed). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. 72nd
ed. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press 1991-1992. |
14 |
Petersen, J., H. (1999): Forurening af fødevarer med blødgører
– Migration fra plast og generel baggrundsforurening. Ph.D Thesis.
The Danish Veterinary and Food Administration. |
15 |
PhysProp - Syracuse Research Corporation. Interactive PhysProp
Database
http://esc.syrres.com/interkow/physdemo.htm |
16 |
Chemicals Inspection and Testing Institute (1992) ; Biodegradation
and bioaccumulation Data of existing Chemicals based on the CSCL
Japan. Japan Chemical Industry Ecology and Toxicology and
Information Center. ISBN 4-89074-101-1. |
17 |
TNO BIBRA International Ltd (1993): TOXICITY PROFILE
Tris(2-ethylhexyl) trimellitate. TNO BIBRA International |
18 |
Hamdani, M. and A. Feigenbaum (1996) Migration form plasticised
poly/vinyl chloride) into fatty media: importance of simulant
selectivity for the choice of volatile fatty simulants. Food Additives
and Contaminants 13, pp 717-730. |
o-Toluene sulphonamide
CAS number: 88-19-7
Physical-chemical, emission, exposure, health and
environment data |
Summary
Physical-chemical
o-Toluene sulphonamide is a compound with a low water solubility,
moderate fat solubility and a low vapour pressure.
Emission
No data found
Exposure
No data found
Health
No data found on acute toxicity, subchronic and chronic toxicity.
o-Toluene sulphonamide is reported as teratogenic in rats, but no
detailed descriptions of the study design is available. Only weak
mutagenic activity is shown.
There is limited evidence that OTSA is carcinogenic when administered
orally to rats. This has been suggested as the cause of
carcinogenicity of saccharin. The available data suggest that OTSA
impurities at the levels normally found in commercial saccharin do not
contribute to the carcinogenicity of saccharin.
Based on very limited data the critical effect has been identified
as possible teratogenicity.
It is not possible to evaluate the data against the classification
criteria for teratogenicity, as information is too sparse. Other
described effects are not classifiable.
Environment
The available data on biodegradation indicate that o-toluene
sulphonamide does not biodegrade readily.
The available BCF values indicate that o-toluene sulphonamide do not
bioaccumulates.
|
|
o-Toluene sulfonamide |
Identification of the substance |
CAS No. |
88-19-7 |
|
EINECS No. |
201-808-8 |
|
EINECS Name |
Toluene-2-sulphonamide |
|
Synonyms |
2-methyl-benzenesulphonamide, o-methylbenzenesulphonamide,
2-methylbenzensulphonamide, toluene-2-sulphonamide, o-toluene
sulfonamide. |
Molecular Formula |
C7H9NO2S |
|
Structural Formula |
Illustration. Structural Formula. CAS no. 88-19-7 (2 Kb)
|
Major Uses |
Plasticiser in the saccharin and amino resins production.
Reactive plasticiser.
Plasticiser for hot-melt adhesives.
Fluorecent pigment. |
[3]
[3]
[3]
[3] |
IUCLID |
The substance is not included in the IUCLID HPVC list. |
|
EU classification |
The compound is not included in Annex I to 67/548/EEC |
|
Physico-chemical Characteristics |
Physical Form |
Colourless octahedral crystals. |
[3] |
Molecular Weight (g/mole) |
171.23 |
|
Melting Point/range (° C) |
156.3 |
|
Boiling Point/range (° C) |
214 ° C at 997.5 mm Hg |
[3] |
Decomposition Temperature (° C) |
No data found |
|
Vapour Pressure (mm Hg at ° C) |
¨ 6´ 10-5
(estimated) at 25 ° C |
[3,15] |
Density (g/cm3 at ° C) |
No data found |
|
Vapour Density (air=1) |
No data found |
|
Henry’s Law constant (atm/m3/mol at °
C) |
4.7´ 10 –7 |
[3,15] |
Solubility (g/l water at ° C) |
¨ Slightly soluble in water (unknown
temperature)
1.62 at 25° C |
[3]
[15] |
Partition Coefficient (log Pow) |
¨ 0.84 (measured) |
[3,15] |
pKa |
No data found |
|
Flammability |
No data found |
|
Explosivity |
No data found |
|
Oxidising Properties |
No data found |
|
Migration potential in polymer |
Less than 0.2 mg/kg (detection limit) migrated from package
material containing 0.96-3.3 mg/dm2 to food |
[20] |
Emission Data |
During production |
No data found |
|
Exposure Data |
Aquatic environment, incl. sediment |
No data found |
|
Terrestrial environment |
No data found |
|
Sewage treatment plant |
No data found |
|
Working environment |
No data found |
|
Consumer goods |
No data found |
|
Man exposed from environment |
No data found |
|
"Secondary poisoning" |
No data found |
|
Atmosphere |
No data found |
|
Dermal |
No data found |
|
Toxicological data |
Observations in humans |
¨ A 2-month old infant developed no
symptoms of toxicity following inadvertently uptake of a 1500 mg dose
of sulfasalazine (same group as o-toluene sulphonamide)
One patient developed seizures, coma, hypoxia, hyperglycemia,
metabolic acidosis and methemoglobinemia after an oral dose of 50 mg
sulfasalazine and 50 mg paracetamol. Effects (except
methemoglobinemia) could be secondary to acetmenophen toxicity.
Overdose of sulfasalazine result in coma in one patient and tremor
in another. |
[3]
[3]
[3] |
Acute toxicity |
Oral |
No relevant data found |
|
Dermal |
No relevant data found |
|
Inhalation |
No relevant data found |
|
Other routes |
No relevant data found |
|
Skin irritation |
No relevant data found |
|
Eye irritation |
No relevant data found |
|
Irritation of respiratory tract |
No relevant data found |
|
Skin sensitisation |
No relevant data found |
|
Subchronic and Chronic Toxicity |
Oral |
No relevant data found |
|
Inhalation |
No relevant data found |
|
Dermal |
No relevant data found |
|
|
Mutagenicity, Genotoxicity and Carcinogenicity |
Mutagenicity |
Salmonella typhrimurium:
Negative. Histidine reverse gene mutation,
Ames assay.
Salmonella:
Up to 1 mg/plate and 2.5 mg/plate. Not mutagenic. Microsome plate
with and without arochlor 1254-induced rat liver 9000 XG supernatant.
¨ No test dose mentioned. Weak mutagenic
effects. Modified Salmonella/microsome test.
Saccharomyces cericisiae:
¨ Up to 1 mg/plate. No gene
conversion. Test both with and without metabolic activation.
Drosophila melanogaster:
No test dose mentioned. No conclusion. Sex-linked recessive lethal
gene mutation.
0.2 µl or feeding 5 mmol. No sex-linked recessive lethal mutation.
¨ 0.05% (3 d). Larger scale feeding study
than previous study. Significant doubling of frequency of sex-linked
lethal mutation.
¨ No test dose mentioned. Weak mutagenic
effects. |
[7]
[17]
[3]
[17]
[7]
[17]
[3]
[19]
|
Chromosome Abnormalities |
Drosophila melanogaster:
Mammalian polychromatic erythrocytes. No conclusion. Micronucleus
test, chromosome aberrations.
0.9-400 µg/ml (24 h). No increase in number of breaks, gaps, and
other aberrations. |
[7]
[3] |
Other Genotoxic Effects |
No relevant data found |
|
Carcinogenicity |
Mouse:
2x1g/kg bw, oral and ip. No micronuclei in bone marrow cells.
BHK 21/CL 13 cell:
0.025-2500 µg/ml. No morphological transformation in cells. |
[3]
[3]
|
|
Rat
0, 20 and 200 mg/kg bw (lifetime). No increase in incidence of
malignant tumors.
2.5, 25 and 250 mg/kg bw. Benign bladder tumor in f0 (one in control
group, one in both group 2.5 and 250 mg/kg bw) and in f1 (2 in the 2.5
mg/kg bw).
0 or 1% in drinking water or 90 mg/kg. (2 year). No difference in
overall tumor incidence (2 year).
0.15 ml NMU/N-methyl-N-nitrosourea, 2 weeks later 0, 0.08 mg
o-toluenesulphonamide /kg bw in diet or 0.1% o-toluenesulphonamide in
drinking water (2 years). No difference in overall tumour incidence
was observed.
¨ There is limited evidence that
o-toluenesulphonamide is carcinogenic when given orally to rats. |
[3]
[3]
[3]
[3]
[17]
|
Reproductive Toxicity, Embryotoxicity and
Teratogenicity |
Reproductive Toxicity |
¨ In connection with assessment of
saccharine and its impurities, among others o-toluenesulphonamide, it
has been found that these impurities are responsible for the
reproductive effects of impure saccharine. |
[18] |
|
Rat:
250 mg/kg bw. Lower feed consumption. 2-generation study. |
[3]
|
Teratogenicity |
Rat:
¨ Found to be teratogenic.
0-250 mg/kg, gavage throughout gestation and lactation, also
puppets. Dose-response for incidence of bladder calculi in 21-day-old
pups and 105-day old rats.
No dose mentioned, dietary treatment during mating, gestation and
lactation and after weaning. Renal calculi and bladder lesions were
observed in 8-day old pups. |
[3]
[3]
[3] |
Other Toxicity Studies |
No relevant data found. |
|
|
|
|
|
Toxicokinetics
|
Toxicokinetics |
Rat:
20, 125 or 200 mg/kg bw. Single oral doses. Result: Main metabolites
in the urine were 2-sulfamoylbenzyl alcohol and it sulfate or
glucuronic acid conjugates (80%), n-acetyltoluene-2-sulphonamide (6%),
saccharin (3%) and 2-sulfamoylbenzoic acid (2%). 79, 58 and 36% of
activity recovered in urine after 24 h, 7, 14 and 33% of the dose in
the urine from 24-48 h, respectively. After 7 d 4.5, 5.9 and 7% of
activity was recovered from faeces. |
[3]
|
|
Human:
0.2-0.4 mg/kg bw, oral doses. Result: Excreted more slowly in humans
than in rats. 50% excreted after 24 h. and 80% within 48 h. less than
1% was found in the faeces. Main urine metabolites were
2-sulfamoylbenzyl alcohol and its sulfates and glucoronic conjugates
(35%), saccharin (35%), 2-sulfamoylbenzoic acid (4%) and
N-acetyltouluene-2-sulphonamide (2%). |
[3]
|
Ecotoxicity Data |
Algae |
No data found |
|
Crustacean |
No data found |
|
Fish |
No data found |
|
Bacteria |
No data found |
|
Terrestrial organisms |
No data found |
|
Other toxicity information |
No data found |
|
Environmental Fate |
BCF |
¨ 0.4-2.6
2.5 (estimated) |
[16]
[3] |
Aerobic biodegradation |
Aquatic – ready:
¨ 0 % in 14 d, OECD 301C |
[16]
|
Anaerobic biodegradation |
No data found |
|
Metabolic pathway |
No data found |
|
Mobility |
Koc=68 (estimated) |
[3] |
Conclusion |
Physical-chemical |
o-toluensulphonamide is a compound with a low water solubility, low
fat solubility and a low vapour pressure. |
Emission |
No data found |
Exposure |
Not data found |
Health |
No data found on acute toxicity, subchronic and chronic toxicity.
o-Toluensulphonamide is reported as teratogenic in rats, but no
detailed descriptions of the study design is available. Only weak
mutagenic activity is shown.
There is limited evidence that OTSA is carcinogenic when administered
orally to rats. This has been suggested as the cause of
carcinogenicity of saccharin. The available data suggest that OTSA
impurities at the levels normally found in commercial saccharin do not
contribute to the carcinogenicity of saccharin.
Based on very limited data the critical effect has been identified as
possible teratogenicity.
It is not possible to evaluate the data against the classification
criteria for teratogenicity, as information is too sparse. Other
described effects are not classifiable. |
Environment |
The available data on biodegradation indicate that
o-toluensulphonamide do not biodegrades readily.
The available BCF values indicate that o-toluensulphonamide do not
bioaccumulates. |
References |
1 |
European Commission Joint Research Centre (1996): International
Uniform Chemical Information Database. IUCLID CD-ROM – Existing
Chemicals – 1996. |
2 |
Chemfinder – Cambridge Soft.
http://www.chemfinder.com |
3 |
HSDB - Hazardous Substances Data Bank
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
4 |
IRIS - Integrated Risk Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
5 |
CCRIS - Chemical Carcinogenesis Research Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
6 |
NTP – National Toxicology Program, Chemical Health & Safety
Data
http://ntp-server.niehs.nih.gov |
7 |
Genetox - Genetic Toxicology
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
8 |
Chemfate - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate
Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
9 |
Biodeg - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
10 |
Betratergremium für umweltrelevante Altstoffe (1996): Di-(2-ethylhexyl)adipat,
BUA-Stoffbericht 196. S. Hirzel, Frankfurt am Main. |
11 |
ECOTOX – US. EPA . ECOTOX database system
http://www.epa.gov |
12 |
Verschueren, K. (1996) Handbook of Environmental Data on Organic
Chemicals. 3rd Ed. Van Nostrand Reinhold. New York. |
13 |
Lide, D.R. (ed). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. 72nd
ed. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press 1991-1992. |
14 |
Petersen, J., H. (1999): Forurening af fødevarer med blødgører
– Migration fra plast og generel baggrundsforurening. Ph.D Thesis.
The Danish Veterinary and Food Administration. |
15 |
PhysProp - Syracuse Research Corporation. Interactive PhysProp
Database
http://esc.syrres.com/interkow/physdemo.htm |
16 |
Chemicals Inspection and Testing Institute (1992); Biodegradation
and bioaccumulation Data of Existing Chemicals based on the CSCL
Japan. Japan Chemical Industry Ecology and Toxicology nad
Information Center. ISBN 4-89074-101-1 |
17 |
IARC MONOGRAPHS, vol 22 |
18 |
Lederer, L.(1977): La Saccharine, ses Pollutants et leur Effet
Tératogène, Louvaine Méd. 96 : 495-501, 1977 |
19 |
Eckardt, K. et al (1980): Mutagenicity study of Remsen-Fahlberg
Saccharin and Contaminants, Toxcology Letter, 7 (1980),
Elsevier/North-Holland Biomedical Press. |
20 |
Nerín, C., Cacho, J., Gancedo, P. (1993) Plasticisers from
printing inks in a selection of food packagings and their migration to
food. Food Additives and Contaminants 10, pp 453-460. |
2,2,4-trimethyl-1,3-pentandioldiisobutyrate
CAS number: 6846-50-0
Physical-chemical, emission, exposure, health and
environment data |
Summary
Physical-chemical
2,2,4-trimethyl-1,3-pentandioldiisobutyrate (TXIB) is a compound
with a low water solubility (1-2 mg/l).
The Log Pow value of 4.1 indicates lipophillic properties.
Emission
No data found.
Exposure
No data found.
Health
The available data indicate that TXIB is a substance of low
toxicity. Results from animal tests do not fulfil the classification
criteria with regard to acute toxicity, skin and eye irritation and
skin sensitisation. Reversible liver changes were found rats in a
chronic study whereas chronic toxicity testing in beagles did not
reveal any significant findings.
TXIB is eliminated via urine and faeces. Half to two-thirds are
excreted in urine (about two-thirds within 48 hours, about 90% by 5
days and almost complete in 10 days). Faecal elimination appeared to
take 2-4 days.
Environment
According to the available data on biodegradation there is no
evidence of ready biodegradability of TXIB.
The available 50 % effect concentrations are above tested ranges,
and the NOECs are assigned to the maximum tested concentration of TXIB
(~1.5 mg/l). |
|
2,2,4-trimethyl-1,3-pentandioldiisobutyrate |
Identification of the substance |
CAS No. |
6846-50-0 |
|
EINECS No. |
229-934-9 |
|
EINECS Name |
1-isopropyl-2,2-dimethyltrimethylene diisobutyrate. |
|
Synonyms |
2,2,4-Trimethyl-1,3-pentanediol diisobutyrate, Kodaflex, TXIB,
2,2,4-Trimethylpentanediol diisobutyrate,
(1-isopropyl-2,2-dimethyl-1,3-propandiyl) diisobutyrate.
|
Molecular Formula |
Illustration. Structural Formula. CAS nr. 6846-50-0 (2 Kb)
|
|
Structural Formula |
C16H30O4 |
Major Uses |
No data found. |
|
IUCLID |
The substance is included in the IUCLID HPVC list. |
|
EU classification |
The compound is not included in Annex I to 67/548/EEC |
|
Physico-chemical Characteristics |
Physical Form |
No data found. |
|
Molecular Weight (g/mole) |
286.41 |
|
Melting Point/range (° C) |
-70 ° C |
[1a,15] |
Boiling Point/range (° C) |
280 ° C |
[1a,15] |
Decomposition Temperature (° C) |
No data found. |
|
Vapour Pressure (mm Hg at ° C) |
No data found (0.009 reported in [1a] but no unit given). |
[1a] |
Density (g/cm3 at ° C) |
0.945 at 20 ° C
0.94
0.944 |
[1a]
[2]
[15] |
Vapour Density (air=1) |
No data found. |
|
Henry’s Law constant (atm/m3/mol at °
C) |
No data found. |
|
Solubility (g/l water at ° C) |
¨ 0.001-0.002
Immiscible with water |
[1a]
[15] |
Partition Coefficient (LogPow) |
4.1 (measured) |
[1a] |
pKa |
No data found. |
|
Flammability |
No data found. |
|
Explosivity |
No data found. |
|
Oxidising Properties |
No data found. |
|
Migration potential in polymer |
No data found. |
|
Emission Data |
During production |
No data found. |
|
Exposure Data |
Aquatic environment, incl. sediment |
No data found. |
|
Terrestrial environment |
No data found. |
|
Sewage treatment plant |
No data found. |
|
Working environment |
No data found. |
|
Consumer goods |
No data found. |
|
Man exposed from environment |
No data found. |
|
"Secondary poisoning" |
No data found. |
|
Atmosphere |
No data found. |
|
Dermal |
No data found. |
|
Toxicological data |
Observations in humans |
No data found. |
|
Acute toxicity |
Oral |
Rat
¨ LD50 > 3,200 mg/kg bw.
Mouse
LD50 > 6,400 mg/kg bw. |
[1a]
[1a]
|
Dermal |
Guinea pig
¨ LD50 > 20 ml/kg. |
[1a]
|
Inhalation |
Rat
¨ 6 hour exposure to 0.12 mg/l or 5.3
mg/l. LC50 > 5.3 mg/l. |
[1a]
|
Other routes |
Rat
¨ LD50 approx. 3,200 mg/kg
bw. i.p. |
[1a]
|
Skin irritation |
Guinea pig
No information on test material and exposure time. Slight skin
irritant when covered and more irritating when uncovered. |
[1a]
|
Eye irritation |
Rabbit
0.1 ml. Not irritating, not to be classified. (OECD 405/1990) |
[1a]
|
Irritation of respiratory tract |
No data found. |
|
Skin sensitisation |
Guinea pig
No detailed information. (Test protocol similar to OECD 406).
Injection via footpad. Not sensitising. |
[1a]
|
Subchronic and Chronic Toxicity |
Oral |
Rat
Albino rats. 0.1% and 1% w/w in the diet for 103 d. No significant
changes. NOAEL = 0.1%, LOAEL = 1%
Sprague Dawley rats. 0.1% and 1% w/w in the diet for 52 or 99 d.
Statistically significant higher liver weight in the top dose group.
Liver changes appeared reversible. NOAEL = 0.1%, LOAEL = 1%.
Dog, beagle
0.1%, 0.35%, and 1% in the diet for 13 weeks. No significant
findings. |
[1a]
[1a]
[1a] |
Inhalation |
No data found. |
|
Dermal |
No data found. |
|
Mutagenicity, Genotoxicity and Carcinogenicity |
Mutagenicity |
No data found. |
|
Chromosome Abnormalities |
No data found. |
|
Other Genotoxic Effects |
No data found. |
|
Carcinogenicity |
No data found. |
|
Reproductive Toxicity, Embryotoxicity and
Teratogenicity |
Reproductive Toxicity |
No data found. |
|
Teratogenicity |
No data found. |
|
Other Toxicity Studies |
No data found. |
|
Toxicokinetics |
Toxicokinetics |
Metabolic studies in rats indicated that hydrolysis to the parent
glycol (TMPD) is a major pathway in the disposal of the
diisobutyrate. The substance is rapidly absorbed from the gut. No
elimination via lungs. From half to two-thirds excreted in urine
(about two-thirds within 48 hours, about 90% by 5 d and almost
complete in 10 d). Faecal elimination appeared to take 2-4 d. |
[1a] |
Ecotoxicity Data |
Algae |
No data found. |
|
Crustacean |
Asellus intermedius :
LC50(96h)>1.55 mg/l
NOEC(96h)=1.55 mg/l
Daphnia magna (fw):
LC50(96h)>1.46 mg/l
NOEC(96h)=1.46 mg/l
Gammarus fasciatus :
LC50(96h)>1.55 mg/l
NOEC(96h)=1.55 mg/l |
[1a]
[1a]
[1a]
[1a]
[1a]
[1a]
|
Fish |
Pimephales promelas (fw):
LC50(96h)>1.55 mg/l
NOEC(96h)=1.55 mg/l |
[1a]
[1a]
|
Bacteria |
No data found. |
|
Terrestrial organisms |
No data found. |
|
Other toxicity information |
Dugesia tigrina :
LC50(96h)>1.55 mg/l
NOEC(96h)=1.55 mg/l
Lumbriculus variegatus :
LC50(96h)>1.55 mg/l
NOEC(96h)=1.55 mg/l
Helisoma trivolvis :
LC50(96h)>1.55 mg/l
NOEC(96h)=1.55 mg/l |
[1a]
[1a]
[1a]
[1a]
[1a]
[1a]
|
Environmental Fate |
BCF |
No data found. |
|
Aerobic biodegradation |
Aquatic – other tests:
99.9 % at 650 mg/l (incomplete information) |
[1a]
|
Anaerobic biodegradation |
No data found. |
|
Metabolic pathway |
No data found. |
|
Mobility |
No data found. |
|
Conclusion |
Physical-chemical |
2,2,4-trimethyl-1,3-pentandioldiisobutyrate (TXIB) is a compound
with a low water solubility (1-2 mg/l).
The Log Pow value of 4.1 indicates lipophillic
properties. |
Emission |
No data found. |
Exposure |
No data found. |
Health |
The available data indicate that TXIB is a substance of low
toxicity. Results from animal tests do not fulfil the classification
criteria with regard to acute toxicity, skin and eye irritation and
skin sensitisation. Reversible liver changes were found rats in a
chronic study whereas chronic toxicity testing in beagles did not
reveal any significant findings.
TXIB is eliminated via urine and faeces. Half to two-thirds are
excreted in urine (about two-thirds within 48 hours, about 90% by 5
days and almost complete in 10 days). Faecal elimination appeared to
take 2-4 days. |
Environment |
According to the available data on biodegradation there is no
evidence of ready biodegradability of TXIB.
The available 50 % effect concentrations are above tested ranges,
and the NOECs are assigned to the maximum tested concentration of
TXIB (~1.5 mg/l). |
References |
1 |
European Commission Joint Research Centre (1996): International
Uniform Chemical Information Database. IUCLID CD-ROM – Existing
Chemicals – 1996. |
1a |
European Commission Joint Research Centre (2000): International
Uniform Chemical Information Database. IUCLID CD-ROM. Year 2000
Edition. ISBN 92-828-8641-7. |
2 |
Chemfinder – Cambridge Soft.
http://www.chemfinder.com |
3 |
HSDB - Hazardous Substances Data Bank
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
4 |
IRIS - Integrated Risk Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
5 |
CCRIS - Chemical Carcinogenesis Research Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
6 |
NTP – National Toxicology Program, Chemical Health & Safety
Data
http://ntp-server.niehs.nih.gov |
7 |
Genetox - Genetic Toxicology
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
8 |
Chemfate - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate
Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
9 |
Biodeg - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate
Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
10 |
Betratergremium für umweltrelevante Altstoffe (1996): Di-(2-ethylhexyl)adipat,
BUA-Stoffbericht 196. S. Hirzel, Frankfurt am Main. |
11 |
ECOTOX – US. EPA . ECOTOX database system
http://www.epa.gov |
12 |
Verschueren, K. (1996) Handbook of Environmental Data on Organic
Chemicals. 3rd Ed. Van Nostrand Reinhold. New York. |
13 |
Lide, D.R. (ed). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. 72nd
ed. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press 1991-1992. |
14 |
Petersen, J., H. (1999): Forurening af fødevarer med blødgører
– Migration fra plast og generel baggrundsforurening. Ph.D Thesis.
The Danish Veterinary and Food Administration. |
15 |
Astill, B. D., Terhaar, C. J. and Fassett, D. W. (1972): The
Toxicology and Fate of 2,2,4-Trimethyl-1,3-Pentanediol
Diisobutyrate. Toxicology and applied pharmacology 22, pp
387-399. |
Epoxidized soybean oil
CAS number: 8013-07-8
Physical-chemical, emission, exposure, health and
environment data |
Summary
Physical-chemical
Sufficient data not available.
Emission
No data found
Exposure
No data found
Health
ESBO is only slightly acute toxic. In the acute oral tests LD50
to rat ranged between 21,000-40,000 mg/kg bw and were not
irritating to skin.
ESBO was not mutagenic in Ames test. Based on the limited data
available ESBO was not found to be a potential carcinogen or to
exhibit reproductive toxicity or teratogenitity. In reproductive
toxicity tests in mouse and rat the NOAEL for the parental group was
1,000 mg/kg bw and the NOAEL for the F1 offspring were 1,000 mg/kg
bw.
Environment
According to the available biodegradation data there is good
evidence of ready biodegradability of epoxidized soybean oil.
The available ecotoxicological data indicates that epoxidized
soybean oil is toxic to crustaceans. |
|
Epoxidized soybean oil |
Identification of the substance |
CAS No. |
8013-07-8 |
|
EINECS No. |
232-391-0 |
|
EINECS Name |
Soybean oil, epoxidized |
|
Synonyms |
Soybean oil epoxidized, Epoxidised soyabean oil, ESBO, Epoxidised
soy bean oil. |
Molecular Formula |
No data found |
|
Structural Formula |
No data found |
Major Uses |
Softener.
Solvent.
Construction material additive.
Viscosity adjusters.
Stabiliser.
Plasticiser processing aid. |
[1]
[1]
[1]
[1]
[1]
[3] |
IUCLID |
The substance is included in the IUCLID HPVC list. |
|
EU classification |
The compound is not included in Annex I to 67/548/EEC |
|
Physico-chemical Characteristics |
Physical Form |
No data found |
|
Molecular Weight (g/mole) |
No data found |
|
Melting Point/range (° C) |
No data found |
|
Boiling Point/range (° C) |
No data found |
|
Decomposition Temperature (° C) |
No data found |
|
Vapour Pressure (mm Hg at ° C) |
No data found |
|
Density (g/cm3 at ° C) |
0.994-0.998 |
[1] |
Vapour Density (air=1) |
No data found |
|
Henry’s Law constant (atm/m3/mol at °
C) |
No data found |
|
Solubility (g/l water at ° C) |
Low (unknown temperature) |
[1] |
Partition Coefficient (log Pow) |
> 6 (estimated) |
[1] |
pKa |
No data found |
|
Flammability |
No data found |
|
Explosivity |
No data found |
|
Oxidising Properties |
No data found |
|
Migration potential in polymer |
No data found |
|
Emission Data |
During production |
No data found |
|
Exposure Data |
Aquatic environment, incl. sediment |
No data found |
|
Terrestrial environment |
No data found |
|
Sewage treatment plant |
No data found |
|
Working environment |
No data found |
|
Consumer goods |
No data found |
|
Man exposed from environment |
No data found |
|
"Secondary poisoning" |
No data found |
|
Atmosphere |
No data found |
|
Dermal |
No data found |
|
Toxicological data |
Observations in humans |
¨ Asthma developed in a worker
exposed to vapour from heated polyvinyl chloride film containing
ESBO. Challenge with ESBO vapour of unspecified concentration
produced asthmatic symptoms within 5 min. |
[1] |
Acute toxicity |
Oral |
Rat:
21,000-40,000 mg/kg bw. Single dose of 5.000 mg/kg caused dispnoea
and diarrhoea. (must be 5,000).
¨ LD50>5,000 mg/kg bw. |
[1]
[1]
|
Dermal |
Rabbit:
No dose mentioned (24 h) occlusion. LD50>20,000 mg/kg
bw. |
[1]
|
Inhalation |
No data found |
|
Other routes |
No data found |
|
Skin irritation |
Rabbit:
¨ Moderately irritating (24 h)
occlusion.
Slightly irritating. EPA, Federal reg., Vol 43, No. 163 |
[1]
[1]
|
Eye irritation |
Rabbit:
0.5 ml. Not irritating. Instillation of 0.5 ml of undiluted
substance.
¨ Not irritating. EPA, Federal Register,
Vol. 43, No. 163. |
[1]
[1]
|
Irritation of respiratory tract |
No data found |
|
Skin sensitisation |
Guinea pig:
¨ Induction phase of 8 intracutaneous
injection of diluted product (no further information). 3 weeks later
challenge with 0,1 ml of 0.1% Reoplast 39%. Rechallange after 2
weeks with patch test 30% Reoplast 39 in 1:1 propylene glycol:saline
cover for 24 h, 20 animals/group. No sensitisation was observed.
Optimisation test. |
[1]
|
Subchronic and Chronic Toxicity |
Oral |
Rat
¨ 0.25% and 2.5% Reoplast 39 (2 years)
oral feed, 48 animals/dose group. NOAEL: Approx. 1.3 mg/kg bw.
Slight injury in uterus at 2.5% (ca. 1.4 g/kg bw/d).
Approx. 10 g/kg bw/d, epoxide numbers 14.6-111.5 (10 w). Slow
growth, death in groups receiving compound with epoxide number 49.7
or more. Water intake increased with epoxide number while food
intake and protein utilisation decreased. Feeding with epoxy number
105 and 111.5 - severe degeneration of testes. Fatty degeneration in
the controls and in the group fed ESBO with epoxide numbers
14.6-49.7.
1.4 g/kg/application, 2 applications/w (16 months). NOAEL= 1,400
mg/kg bw. |
[1]
[1]
[1]
|
|
Dog
Up to 5% paraplex G-60 and paraplex G-62 (ca. 1.25 g/kg/d)(one year)
oral feed. Food intake and bw decrease (5%) in all dose groups.
Slight liver change in 5% paraplex G-62.
¨ 1.4 g/kg (12 months) 2 applications/w.
NOAEL= 1,400 mg/kg. |
[1]
[1] |
Inhalation |
No data found |
|
Dermal |
No data found |
|
Mutagenicity, Genotoxicity and Carcinogenicity |
Mutagenicity |
Salmonella typhimurium:
Up to 2,025 µg/plate. Test strain: TA98, TA100, TA1535, TA1537. No
mutagenicity was observed. Ames test, Ciba methode nach B. N. Ames
1973 u. 1975 with and without metabolic activation.
4, 20, 100 ,500, 2,500, 12,500 µg/plate. Test strain: TA98, TA100,
TA1535, TA1537 and TA 1538. No mutagenicity was observed. Ames test,
Henkel-method "Salmonella typhimurium reverse mutation
assay" with and without metabolic activation, GLP.
Up to 5,000 µg/plate. Test strain: TA98, TA100, TA1535, TA1537 and
TA102. No mutagenicity was observed. Ames test, Siehe RE with and
without metabolic activation. GLP. |
[1]
[1]
[1]
|
|
Mouse:
Up to 5,000 µg/l. No mutagenicity was observed. Mouse lymphona
assay , Siehe RE, with and without metabolic activation., GLP |
[1]
|
Chromosome Abnormalities |
No data found |
|
Other Genotoxic Effects |
Humane lymphocytes:
No doses specified (20 to 44 h without, 3 h with metabolic
activation). No evidence of clastogenic effect or induced
aneuploidy. Cytogenetic assay Siehe Re. |
[1]
|
Carcinogenicity |
Mouse:
¨ No dose specified undiluted ESBO
(whole life) 3timesw, 40 animals. No skin tumors.
Total dose 2.15 g/kg bw (3 w), i.p. once/w. No incidence of lung
tumors after 16 weeks.
Rat:
Up to 2.5% (1.4 g/kg bw/d) Paraplex G-60 and Paraplex G-62 (2 years)
oral feed. No evidence of carcinogenicity.
Up to 5% paraplex G-60 and Paraplex G-62 (1 or 2 years) oral feed.
No evidence of carcinogenicity. |
[1]
[1]
[1]
[1]
|
Reproductive Toxicity, Embryotoxicity and
Teratogenicity |
Reproductive Toxicity |
Rat:
¨ 100, 300, 1,000 mg/kg bw/d (21 d
post-partum) gavage. NOAEL, parental = 1,000 mg/kg bw, NOAEL, F1
offspring = 1,000 mg/kg bw. OECD 415.
20% (ca. 10 g/kg bw/d; 7 w), epoxide number 15 and 50. No
histological changes of the testes in animals treated with epoxide
number 15 to 50. Severe degeneration in testes of animals tested
with ESBO with epoxide number between 105 or 111.5. |
[1]
[1]
|
Teratogenicity |
Rat:
¨ 100, 300, 1,000 mg/kg bw/d (6. to 15.
day of the pregnancy) gavage, 25 females/dose group. NOAEL, parental
= 1,000 mg/kg bw, NOAEL, F1 offspring = 1,000 mg/kg bw. OECD 414.
|
[1]
|
Other Toxicity Studies |
No data found |
|
Toxicokinetics
|
Toxicokinetics |
No data found |
|
Ecotoxicity Data |
Algae |
No data found |
|
Crustacean |
Artemia salina :
EC50(24h) = 240 mg/l, unspecified static test
Daphnia magna:
¨ EC50(24h) = 8 mg/l, Dir.
87/302/EEC, part C
NOEC(24h) = 0.7 mg/l, Dir. 87/302/EEC, part C |
[1,11]
[1]
[1]
|
Fish |
Leuciscus idus (fw):
¨ LC50(48h) = 900 mg/l, DIN
38412-L15
LC50(48h) = >10,000 mg/l, DIN 38412-L15 |
[1]
[1]
|
Bacteria |
Activated sludge :
EC50(3h)>100 mg/l, OECD 209
Pseudomonas putida :
EC0(0.5h)>10,000 mg/l, DIN 38412-L27 |
[1]
[1]
|
Terrestrial organisms |
No data found |
|
Other toxicity information |
Water transpiration of Vicia faba (pea) sprayed with a 10
% suspension of epoxidized soybean oil was reduced by 30 %. A slight
increase in grain yield (g dry weight/plant) of maize or no effect
(dependent on water supply of plants) when sprayed onto soil or
plant was observed itself as a 0,05 - 0,1 % suspension was further
observed. |
[1] |
Environmental Fate |
BCF |
No data found |
|
Aerobic biodegradation |
Aquatic – ready biodegradability tests:
¨ 79 % at 10 mg/l in 28 d, OECD 301 B
¨ 78 % at 2 mg/l in 28 d, OECD 301 D
Aquatic – other tests:
20 % at 10 mg/l in 20 d, unspecified BOD test |
[16]
[17]
[1]
|
Anaerobic biodegradation |
No data found |
|
Metabolic pathway |
No data found |
|
Mobility |
No data found |
|
Conclusion |
Physical-chemical |
No data found |
Emission |
No data found |
Exposure |
No data found |
Health |
ESBO is only slightly acute toxic. In the acute oral tests LD50
in rats ranged between 21,000-40,000 mg/kg bw. ESBO was only
slightly irritating to skin.
ESBO was not mutagenic in Ames test. Based on the limited data
available ESBO was not found to be carcinogen or to exhibits
reproductive toxicity or teratogenitity. In reproductive toxicity
tests in mouse and rat the NOAEL for the parental group were 1,000
mg/kg bw and the NOAEL for the F1 offspring were 1,000 mg/kg bw. |
Environment |
According to the available biodegradation data there is good
evidence of ready biodegradability of epoxidized soybean oil.
The available ecotoxicological data indicates that epoxidized
soybean oil is toxic to crustaceans. |
References |
1 |
European Commission Joint Research Centre (1996): International
Uniform Chemical Information Database. IUCLID CD-ROM – Existing
Chemicals – 1996. |
1a |
European Commission Joint Research Centre (2000): International
Uniform Chemical Information Database. IUCLID CD-ROM. Year 2000
Edition. ISBN 92-828-8641-7. |
2 |
Chemfinder – Cambridge Soft.
http://www.chemfinder.com |
3 |
HSDB - Hazardous Substances Data Bank
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
4 |
IRIS - Integrated Risk Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
5 |
CCRIS - Chemical Carcinogenesis Research Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
6 |
NTP – National Toxicology Program, Chemical Health & Safety
Data
http://ntp-server.niehs.nih.gov |
7 |
Genetox - Genetic Toxicology
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
8 |
Chemfate - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate
Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
9 |
Biodeg - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate
Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
10 |
Betratergremium für umweltrelevante Altstoffe (1996): Di-(2-ethylhexyl)adipat,
BUA-Stoffbericht 196. S. Hirzel, Frankfurt am Main. |
11 |
ECOTOX – US. EPA . ECOTOX database system
http://www.epa.gov |
12 |
Verschueren, K. (1996) Handbook of Environmental Data on Organic
Chemicals. 3rd Ed. Van Nostrand Reinhold. New York. |
13 |
Lide, D.R. (ed). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. 72nd
ed. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press 1991-1992. |
14 |
Petersen, J., H. (1999): Forurening af fødevarer med blødgører
– Migration fra plast og generel baggrundsforurening. Ph.D Thesis.
The Danish Veterinary and Food Administration. |
15 |
Ciba Additive GmbH Lambertheim (1988) not published. Quoted in
ref 1. |
16 |
Henkel KGaA (Pruefnr. 7014), not published. Quoted in ref. 1. |
Dipropyleneglycol dibenzoate
CAS number: 27138-31-4
Physical-chemical, emission, exposure, health and
environment data |
Summary
Physical-chemical
Dipropyleneglycol dibenzoate is a compound with low water
solubility (15 mg/l) and a low vapour pressure. The estimated Log Pow
value of 3.88 indicates lipophillic properties.
Emission
No data found.
Exposure
No data found.
Health
No data found.
Environment
No data found. |
|
Dipropyleneglycol dibenzoate |
Identification of the substance |
CAS No. |
27138-31-4 |
|
EINECS No. |
248-258-5 |
|
EINECS Name |
Oxydipropyl dibenzoate |
|
Synonyms |
Propanol, oxybis-, dibenzoate |
Molecular Formula |
C20H22O5 |
|
Structural Formula |
Illustration- Structural Formula. CAS nr. 27138-31-4 (2 Kb)
|
Major Uses |
No data found |
|
IUCLID |
The substance is not included in the IUCLID HPVC list. |
|
EU classification |
The compound is not included in Annex I to 67/548/EEC |
|
Physico-chemical Characteristics |
Physical Form |
No data found |
|
Molecular Weight (g/mole) |
342.4 |
|
Melting Point/range (° C) |
No data found |
|
Boiling Point/range (° C) |
No data found |
|
Decomposition Temperature (° C) |
No data found |
|
Vapour Pressure (mm Hg at ° C) |
¨ 4.6´ 10-7
at 25 ° C |
[15] |
Density (g/cm3 at ° C) |
No data found |
|
Vapour Density (air=1) |
No data found |
|
Henry’s Law constant (atm/m3/mol at °
C) |
1.38´ 10-8 at 25 °
C |
[15] |
Solubility (g/l water at ° C) |
¨ 0.015 (at 25 °
C) |
[15] |
Partition Coefficient (log Pow) |
¨ 3.88 (estimated) |
[15] |
pKa |
No data found |
|
Flammability |
No data found |
|
Explosivity |
No data found |
|
Oxidising Properties |
No data found |
|
Migration potential in polymer |
No data found |
|
Emission Data |
During production |
No data found |
|
Exposure Data |
Aquatic environment, incl. sediment |
No data found |
|
Terrestrial environment |
No data found |
|
Sewage treatment plant |
No data found |
|
Working environment |
No data found |
|
Consumer goods |
No data found |
|
Man exposed from environment |
No data found |
|
"Secondary poisoning" |
No data found |
|
Atmosphere |
No data found |
|
Dermal |
No data found |
|
Toxicological data |
Observations in humans |
No data found. |
|
|
Acute toxicity |
Oral |
No data found. |
|
Dermal |
No data found. |
|
Inhalation |
No data found. |
|
Other routes |
No data found. |
|
Skin irritation |
No data found. |
|
Eye irritation |
No data found. |
|
Irritation of respiratory tract |
No data found. |
|
Skin sensitisation |
No data found. |
|
Subchronic and Chronic Toxicity |
Oral |
No data found. |
|
Inhalation |
No data found. |
|
Dermal |
No data found. |
|
Mutagenicity, Genotoxicity and Carcinogenicity |
Mutagenicity |
No data found. |
|
Chromosome Abnormalities |
No data found. |
|
Other Genotoxic Effects |
No data found. |
|
Carcinogenicity |
No data found. |
|
Reproductive Toxicity, Embryotoxicity and
Teratogenicity |
Reproductive Toxicity |
No data found. |
|
Teratogenicity |
No data found. |
|
Other Toxicity Studies |
No data found. |
|
Toxicokinetics |
Toxicokinetics |
No data found. |
|
Ecotoxicity Data |
Algae |
No data found. |
|
Crustacean |
No data found |
|
Fish |
No data found |
|
Bacteria |
No data found |
|
Terrestrial organisms |
No data found |
|
Other toxicity information |
No data found |
|
Environmental Fate |
BCF |
No data found |
|
Aerobic biodegradation |
No data found |
|
Anaerobic biodegradation |
No data found |
|
Metabolic pathway |
No data found |
|
Mobility |
No data found |
|
Conclusion |
Physical-chemical |
Dipropyleneglycol dibenzoate is a compound with low water
solubility (15 mg/l) and a low vapour pressure. The estimated Log Pow
value of 3.88 indicates lipophillic properties. |
Emission |
No data found |
Exposure |
No data found |
Health |
No data found |
Environment |
No data found |
|
References |
1 |
European Commission Joint Research Centre (1996): International
Uniform Chemical Information Database. IUCLID CD-ROM – Existing
Chemicals – 1996. |
1a |
European Commission Joint Research Centre (2000): International
Uniform Chemical Information Database. IUCLID CD-ROM. Year 2000
Edition. ISBN 92-828-8641-7. |
2 |
Chemfinder – Cambridge Soft.
http://www.chemfinder.com |
3 |
HSDB - Hazardous Substances Data Bank
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
4 |
IRIS - Integrated Risk Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
5 |
CCRIS - Chemical Carcinogenesis Research Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
6 |
NTP – National Toxicology Program, Chemical Health & Safety
Data
http://ntp-server.niehs.nih.gov |
7 |
Genetox - Genetic Toxicology
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
8 |
Chemfate - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate
Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
9 |
Biodeg - Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate
Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
10 |
Betratergremium für umweltrelevante Altstoffe (1996): Di-(2-ethylhexyl)adipat,
BUA-Stoffbericht 196. S. Hirzel, Frankfurt am Main.
|
11 |
ECOTOX – US. EPA . ECOTOX database system
http://www.epa.gov |
12 |
Verschueren, K. (1996) Handbook of Environmental Data on Organic
Chemicals. 3rd Ed. Van Nostrand Reinhold. New York. |
13 |
Lide, D.R. (ed). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. 72nd
ed. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press 1991-1992. |
14 |
Petersen, J., H. (1999): Forurening af fødevarer med blødgører
– Migration fra plast og generel baggrundsforurening. Ph.D Thesis.
The Danish Veterinary and Food Administration. |
15 |
PhysProp - Syracuse Research Corporation. Interactive PhysProp
Database
http://esc.syrres.com/interkow/physdemo.htm |
Dioctyl sebacate
CAS number: 122-62-3
Physical-chemical, emission, exposure, health and
environment data |
Summary
Physical-chemical
Dioctyl sebacate is a compound with a low estimated vapour
pressure and water solubility.
The estimated Log Pow value indicates that dioctyl
sebacate may bioaccumulate.
Emission
No data found
Exposure
No data found
Health
Only a limited data set were found.
The acute toxicity for rats was as LD50 1,280 mg/kg bw
and for rabbit 540 mg/kg bw.
Based on the available data dioctyl sebacate is not considered a
potential carcinogen, and has not been shown to produce any
reproductive toxicity.
Environment
No data found |
|
Dioctyl sebacate |
Identification of the substance |
CAS No. |
122-62-3 |
|
EINECS No. |
204-558-8 |
|
EINECS Name |
Bis(2-ethylhexyl) sebacate |
|
Synonyms |
Decanedionic acid bis(2-Ethylhexyl) ester, octyl Sebacate,
sebacic acid bis(2-ethylhexyl) ester, bis(2-ethylhexyl) sebacate,
bisoflex dos, DOS, 2-ethylhexyl sebacate, 1-hexanol
2-ethyl-sebacate, monoplex dos, octoil s, PX 438, Staflex dos,
Plexol 201, bis(2-ethylhexyl) decanedioate, Edenol 888, Ergoplast
sno, Reolube dos, DEHS. |
Molecular Formula |
C26H50O4 |
|
Structural Formula |
Illustration. Structural Formula. CAS nr. 122-62-3 (2 Kb)
|
Major Uses |
Synthetic lubricant for reaction motor
Plasticiser for poly(methyl methylacrylate) and cyclonite. |
[3]
[3] |
IUCLID |
The substance is not included in the IUCLID HPVC list. |
|
EU classification |
The compound is not included in Annex I to 67/548/EEC |
|
Physico-chemical Characteristics |
Physical Form |
Pale straw coloured liquid.
Oily colourless liquid.
Pale yellow liquid.
Clear light coloured liquid. |
[3]
[3]
[6]
[6] |
Molecular Weight (g/mole) |
426.68 |
|
Melting Point/range (° C) |
-67 ° C
¨ –48 ° C |
[2]
[3,6] |
Boiling Point/range (° C) |
248 at 4 mm Hg
256 ° C at 5 mm Hg |
[2,6]
[3] |
Decomposition Temperature (° C) |
No data found |
|
Vapour Pressure (mm Hg at ° C) |
¨ 1.0´ 10-7
(estimated, 25 ° C) |
[15] |
Density (g/cm3 at ° C) |
0.914
0.912 at 25 ° C
0.91 at 25 ° C |
[2]
[3]
[6] |
Vapour Density (air=1) |
14.7 |
[3] |
Henry’s Law constant (atm/m3/mol at °
C) |
No data found |
|
Solubility (g/l water at ° C) |
Insoluble (temperature unknown)
¨ 3.5´ 10-7
(estimated, 25 ° C) |
[6]
[15] |
Partition Coefficient (log Pow) |
¨ 10.08 (estimated) |
[15] |
pKa |
No data found |
|
Flammability |
Slightly flammable when exposed to heat. |
[3] |
Explosivity |
No data found |
|
Oxidising Properties |
No data found |
|
Migration potential in polymer |
76-137 mg/kg Dioctyl sebacate |
[17] |
Emission Data |
During production |
No data found |
|
Exposure Data |
Aquatic environment, incl. sediment |
No data found |
|
Terrestrial environment |
No data found |
|
Sewage treatment plant |
No data found |
|
Working environment |
No data found |
|
Consumer goods |
No data found |
|
Man exposed from environment |
No data found |
|
"Secondary poisoning" |
No data found |
|
Atmosphere |
No data found |
|
Dermal |
No data found |
|
Toxicological data |
Observations in humans |
Volunteers did not generate sensitisation during 48 hour covering
and patch tests.
DOS aerosols have been used to demonstrate particle deposition in
lung and respiratory tract without apparently producing overt toxic
effects. |
[16] |
Acute toxicity |
Oral |
Rat
¨ LD50=1,280 mg/kg |
[6]
|
|
LD50(rat)=1,700 mg/kg bw
LD50(mouse)=9,500 mg/kg bw |
[16]
[16] |
|
Exposure to DOS may produce reduced coordination, laboured
breathing and diarrhoea, with tissue damage in the liver, spleen,
brain and heart. |
[16] |
Dermal |
LD50(guinea-pig) > 10 g/kg bw |
[16] |
Inhalation |
No adverse effects were seen in a 13-week study where 12 rats
exposed to 250 mg/m3.
No seen effects on lung or liver below saturating concentrations
but saturated mist may cause lung toxicity. When DOS is heated to
371 °C decomposition products can lead
to death of rabbits and rats. |
[16] |
Other routes |
Rat
LD50= 900 mg/kg , i.v.
Rabbit
¨ LD50= 540 mg/kg, i.v. |
[16]
[16]
|
Skin irritation |
¨ Not a skin irritant or absorbed
through skin.
Not a skin irritant during 48 hour tests |
[3]
[16] |
Eye irritation |
Above 60 mg/m3 for 1 minute it is irritating |
[16] |
Irritation of respiratory tract |
Above 60 mg/m3 for 1 minute it is irritating |
[16] |
Skin sensitisation |
Not sensitising in rabbits |
[16] |
Subchronic and Chronic Toxicity |
Oral |
No data found |
|
Inhalation |
Rat
Exposed to air bubbled through a column of liquid at 100 °C (6 h).
No toxic effects and no mortality were observed. |
[3]
|
Dermal |
No data found |
|
Mutagenicity, Genotoxicity and Carcinogenicity |
Mutagenicity |
¨ Salmonella typhimurium
No dose specified. Test strains: TA100, TA 1535, TA1537, TA98.
No mutagenicity were observed. Preincubation with and without
metabolic activation system.
|
[5]
|
Chromosome Abnormalities |
No data found |
|
Other Genotoxic Effects |
No data found |
|
Carcinogenicity |
Rat
¨ 200 mg/kg bw (19 months). Result: No
effects observed. No carcinogenic potential.
Rats fed with a diet containing 10 mg/kg bw for up to 19 month
showed no carcinogen effects and the reproduction were normal in a 4
generation study of rats fed with about 10 mg/kg bw. |
[3]
[16] |
Reproductive Toxicity, Embryotoxicity and
Teratogenicity |
Reproductive Toxicity |
Rat
¨ 200 mg/kg bw (19 months). No effects
observed in growth, pathology, reproduction, or during parturition
or nursing in several generations. |
[?]
|
|
Rats fed with a diet containing 10 mg/kg bw for up to 19 month
showed that the reproduction were normal in a 4 generation study of
rats fed with about 10 mg/kg bw. |
[16] |
Teratogenicity |
No data found |
|
Other Toxicity Studies |
No data found |
|
Toxicokinetics |
Toxicokinetics |
Not absorbed through skin. |
[3] |
Ecotoxicity Data |
Algae |
No data found |
|
Crustacean |
No data found |
|
Fish |
No data found |
|
Bacteria |
No data found |
|
Terrestrial organisms |
No data found |
|
Other toxicity information |
No data found |
|
Environmental Fate |
BCF |
No data found |
|
Aerobic biodegradation |
No data found |
|
Anaerobic biodegradation |
No data found |
|
Metabolic pathway |
No data found |
|
Mobility |
No data found |
|
Conclusion |
Physical-chemical |
Dioctyl sebacate is a compound with a low estimated vapour
pressure and water solubility.
The estimated Log Pow value indicates that dioctyl
sebacate may bioaccumulate. |
Emission |
No data found |
Exposure |
No data found |
Health |
Only a limited data set were found.
The acute toxicity for rats was as LD50 1,280 mg/kg bw
and for rabbit 540 mg/kg bw.
Based on the available data dioctyl sebacate is not considered a
potential carcinogen, and has not been shown to produce any
reproductive toxicity. |
Environment |
No data found |
References |
1 |
European Commission Joint Research Centre (1996): International
Uniform Chemical Information Database. IUCLID CD-ROM – Existing
Chemicals – 1996. |
2 |
Chemfinder – Cambridge Soft.
http://www.chemfinder.com |
3 |
HSDB – Hazardous Substances Data Bank
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
4 |
IRIS – Integrated Risk Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
5 |
CCRIS – Chemical Carcinogenesis Research Information System
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
6 |
NTP – National Toxicology Program, Chemical Health & Safety
Data
http://ntp-server.niehs.nih.gov |
7 |
Genetox – Genetic Toxicology
http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov |
8 |
Chemfate – Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate
Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
9 |
Biodeg – Syracuse Research Corporation. Environmental Fate
Database
http://esc.syrres.com |
10 |
Betratergremium für umweltrelevante Altstoffe (1996): Di-(2-ethylhexyl)adipat,
BUA-Stoffbericht 196. S. Hirzel, Frankfurt am Main. |
11 |
ECOTOX – US. EPA . ECOTOX database system
http://www.epa.gov |
12 |
Verschueren, K. (1996) Handbook of Environmental Data on Organic
Chemicals. 3rd Ed. Van Nostrand Reinhold. New York. |
13 |
Lide, D.R. (ed). CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics. 72nd
ed. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press 1991-1992. |
14 |
Petersen, J., H. (1999): Forurening af fødevarer med blødgører
– Migration fra plast og generel baggrundsforurening. Ph.D Thesis.
The Danish Veterinary and Food Administration. |
15 |
PhysProp – Syracuse Research Corporation. Interactive PhysProp
Database
http://esc.syrres.com/interkow/physdemo.htm |
16 |
BIBRA (1996): TOXICITY PROFILE di(2-ethylhexyl)sebacate. TNO
BIBRA International Ltd., 1996. |
17 |
Castle, L., Mercer, A.J., Startin, J.R. & Gilbert, J. (1988)
Migration from plasticised films into foods. 3. Migration of
phthalate, sebacate, citrate and phosphate esters from films used
for retail food packaging. Food Addit. Contam. 5(1), pp 9-20 |
|