Substance Safety Data Sheet and Technical Guidelines for
Methylene Chloride
I. Substance
Identification
A. Substance: Methylene
chloride (CH2Cl2).
B. Synonyms:
MC, Dichloromethane (DCM); Methylene dichloride; Methylene bichloride; Methane
dichloride; CAS: 75-09-2; NCI-C50102.
C.
Physical data:
1. Molecular
weight: 84.9.
2. Boiling point
(760 mm Hg): 39.8 deg. C (104 deg. F).
3.
Specific gravity (water = 1): 1.3.
4. Vapor density (air = 1 at boiling point):
2.9.
5. Vapor pressure at 20 deg.
C (68 deg. F): 350 mm Hg.
6.
Solubility in water, g/100 g water at 20 deg. C (68 deg. F) = 1.32.
7. Appearance and odor: colorless liquid
with a chloroform-like odor.
D.
Uses: MC is used as a solvent, especially where high volatility
is required. It is a good solvent for oils, fats, waxes, resins, bitumen,
rubber and cellulose acetate and is a useful paint stripper and degreaser. It
is used in paint removers, in propellant mixtures for aerosol containers, as a
solvent for plastics, as a degreasing agent, as an extracting agent in the
pharmaceutical industry and as a blowing agent in polyurethane foams. Its
solvent property is sometimes increased by mixing with methanol, petroleum
naphtha or tetrachloroethylene.
E.
Appearance and odor: MC is a clear colorless liquid with a chloroform-like
odor. It is slightly soluble in water and completely miscible with most organic
solvents.
F. Permissible exposure:
Exposure may not exceed 25 parts MC per million parts of air (25 ppm) as an
eight-hour time-weighted average (eight-hour TWA PEL) or 125 parts of MC per
million parts of air (125 ppm) averaged over a fifteen-minute period
(STEL).
II. Health
Hazard Data
A. MC can affect the body if it
is inhaled or if the liquid comes in contact with the eyes or skin. It can also
affect the body if it is swallowed.
B.
Effects of overexposure:
1.
Short-term Exposure: MC is an anesthetic. Inhaling the vapor may cause mental
confusion, light-headedness, nausea, vomiting, and headache. Continued exposure
may cause increased light-headedness, staggering, unconsciousness, and even
death. High vapor concentrations may also cause irritation of the eyes and
respiratory tract. Exposure to MC may make the symptoms of angina (chest pains)
worse. Skin exposure to liquid MC may cause irritation. If liquid MC remains on
the skin, it may cause skin burns. Splashes of the liquid into the eyes may
cause irritation.
2. Long-term
(chronic) exposure: The best evidence that MC causes cancer is from laboratory
studies in which rats, mice and hamsters inhaled MC six hours per day, five
days per week for two years. MC exposure produced lung and liver tumors in mice
and mammary tumors in rats. No carcinogenic effects of MC were found in
hamsters. There are also some human epidemiological studies which show an
association between occupational exposure to MC and increases in biliary (bile
duct) cancer and a type of brain cancer. Other epidemiological studies have not
observed a relationship between MC exposure and cancer. WISHA interprets these
results to mean that there is suggestive (but not absolute) evidence that MC is
a human carcinogen.
C.
Reporting signs and symptoms: You should inform your employer if you develop
any signs or symptoms and suspect that they are caused by exposure to
MC.
D. Warning Properties:
1. Odor Threshold: Different authors have
reported varying odor thresholds for MC. Kirk-Othmer and Sax both reported 25
to 50 ppm; Summer and May both reported 150 ppm; Spector reports 320 ppm.
Patty, however, states that since one can become adapted to the odor, MC should
not be considered to have adequate warning properties.
2. Eye Irritation Level: Kirk-Othmer reports
that "MC vapor is seriously damaging to the eyes." Sax agrees with
Kirk-Othmer's statement. The ACGIH Documentation of TLVs states that irritation
of the eyes has been observed in workers exposed to concentrations up to 5000
ppm.
3. Evaluation of Warning
Properties: Since a wide range of MC odor thresholds are reported (25-320 ppm),
and human adaptation to the odor occurs, MC is considered to be a material with
poor warning properties.
III. Emergency First-Aid Procedures
In the event of emergency, institute first-aid procedures and
send for first-aid or medical assistance.
A.
Eye and Skin Exposures: If there is a potential for liquid MC to
come in contact with eye or skin, face shields and skin protective equipment
must be provided and used. If liquid MC comes in contact with the eye, get
medical attention. Contact lenses should not be worn when working with this
chemical.
B. Breathing: If a
person breathes in large amounts of MC, move the exposed person to fresh air at
once. If breathing has stopped, perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation. Keep the
affected person warm and at rest. Get medical attention as soon as
possible.
C. Rescue: Move the
affected person from the hazardous exposure immediately. If the exposed person
has been overcome, notify someone else and put into effect the established
emergency rescue procedures. Understand the facility's emergency rescue
procedures and know the locations of rescue equipment before the need arises.
Do not become a casualty yourself.
IV. Respirators, Protective Clothing, and
Eye Protection
A. Respirators: Good
industrial hygiene practices recommend that engineering controls be used to
reduce environmental concentrations to the permissible exposure level. However,
there are some exceptions where respirators may be used to control exposure.
Respirators may be used when engineering and work practice controls are not
feasible, when such controls are in the process of being installed, or when
these controls fail and need to be supplemented. Respirators may also be used
for operations which require entry into tanks or closed vessels, and in
emergency situations. If the use of respirators is necessary, the only
respirators permitted are those that have been approved by the National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH). Supplied-air respirators
are required because air-purifying respirators do not provide adequate
respiratory protection against MC. In addition to respirator selection, a
complete written respiratory protection program should be instituted which
includes regular training, maintenance, inspection, cleaning, and evaluation.
If you can smell MC while wearing a respirator, proceed immediately to fresh
air. If you experience difficulty in breathing while wearing a respirator, tell
your employer.
B. Protective
Clothing: Employees must be provided with and required to use impervious
clothing, gloves, face shields (eight-inch minimum), and other appropriate
protective clothing necessary to prevent repeated or prolonged skin contact
with liquid MC or contact with vessels containing liquid MC. Any clothing which
becomes wet with liquid MC should be removed immediately and not reworn until
the employer has ensured that the protective clothing is fit for reuse.
Contaminated protective clothing should be placed in a regulated area
designated by the employer for removal of MC before the clothing is laundered
or disposed of. Clothing and equipment should remain in the regulated area
until all of the MC contamination has evaporated; clothing and equipment should
then be laundered or disposed of as appropriate.
C. Eye Protection: Employees should be
provided with and required to use splash-proof safety goggles where liquid MC
may contact the eyes.
V.
Housekeeping and Hygiene Facilities
For purposes of complying with WAC
296-800-220
and
296-800-230, the
following items should be emphasized:
A.
The workplace should be kept clean, orderly, and in a sanitary
condition. The employer should institute a leak and spill detection program for
operations involving liquid MC in order to detect sources of fugitive MC
emissions.
B. Emergency drench
showers and eyewash facilities are recommended. These should be maintained in a
sanitary condition. Suitable cleansing agents should also be provided to assure
the effective removal of MC from the skin.
C.
Because of the hazardous nature of MC, contaminated protective
clothing should be placed in a regulated area designated by the employer for
removal of MC before the clothing is laundered or disposed of.
VI. Precautions for Safe Use,
Handling, and Storage
A. Fire and Explosion
Hazards: MC has no flash point in a conventional closed tester, but it forms
flammable vapor-air mixtures at approximately 100 deg. C (212 deg. F), or
higher. It has a lower explosion limit of 12%, and an upper explosion limit of
19% in air. It has an autoignition temperature of 556.1 deg. C (1033 deg. F),
and a boiling point of 39.8 deg. C (104 deg. F). It is heavier than water with
a specific gravity of 1.3. It is slightly soluble in water.
B. Reactivity Hazards: Conditions
contributing to the instability of MC are heat and moisture. Contact with
strong oxidizers, caustics, and chemically active metals such as aluminum or
magnesium powder, sodium and potassium may cause fires and explosions. Special
precautions: Liquid MC will attack some forms of plastics, rubber, and
coatings.
C. Toxicity: Liquid MC
is painful and irritating if splashed in the eyes or if confined on the skin by
gloves, clothing, or shoes. Vapors in high concentrations may cause narcosis
and death. Prolonged exposure to vapors may cause cancer or exacerbate cardiac
disease.
D. Storage: Protect
against physical damage. Because of its corrosive properties, and its high
vapor pressure, MC should be stored in plain, galvanized or lead lined, mild
steel containers in a cool, dry, well ventilated area away from direct
sunlight, heat source and acute fire hazards.
E.
Piping Material: All piping and valves at the loading or
unloading station should be of material that is resistant to MC and should be
carefully inspected prior to connection to the transport vehicle and
periodically during the operation.
F.
Usual Shipping Containers: Glass bottles, 5- and 55-gallon steel
drums, tank cars, and tank trucks.
Note: This section addresses MC exposure in marine terminal
and longshore employment only where leaking or broken packages allow MC
exposure that is not addressed through compliance with WAC 296-56.
G. Electrical Equipment:
Electrical installations in Class I hazardous locations as defined in Article
500 of the National Electrical Code, should be installed according to Article
501 of the code; and electrical equipment should be suitable for use in
atmospheres containing MC vapors. See Flammable and Combustible Liquids Code
(NFPA No. 325M), Chemical Safety Data Sheet SD-86 (Manufacturing Chemists'
Association, Inc.).
H.
Firefighting: When involved in fire, MC emits highly toxic and irritating fumes
such as phosgene, hydrogen chloride and carbon monoxide. Wear breathing
apparatus and use water spray to keep fire-exposed containers cool. Water spray
may be used to flush spills away from exposures. Extinguishing media are dry
chemical, carbon dioxide, foam. For purposes of compliance with WAC
296-24-957, locations
classified as hazardous due to the presence of MC shall be Class I.
I. Spills and Leaks: Persons not wearing
protective equipment and clothing should be restricted from areas of spills or
leaks until cleanup has been completed. If MC has spilled or leaked, the
following steps should be taken:
1. Remove
all ignition sources.
2. Ventilate
area of spill or leak.
3. Collect
for reclamation or absorb in vermiculite, dry sand, earth, or a similar
material.
J. Methods of
Waste Disposal: Small spills should be absorbed onto sand and taken to a safe
area for atmospheric evaporation. Incineration is the preferred method for
disposal of large quantities by mixing with a combustible solvent and spraying
into an incinerator equipped with acid scrubbers to remove hydrogen chloride
gases formed. Complete combustion will convert carbon monoxide to carbon
dioxide. Care should be taken for the presence of phosgene.
K. You should not keep food, beverage, or
smoking materials, or eat or smoke in regulated areas where MC concentrations
are above the permissible exposure limits.
L.
Portable heating units should not be used in confined areas where
MC is used.
M. Ask your supervisor
where MC is used in your work area and for any additional plant safety and
health rules.
VII.
Medical Requirements
Your employer is required to offer you the opportunity to
participate in a medical surveillance program if you are exposed to MC at
concentrations at or above the action level (12.5 ppm eight-hour TWA) for more
than thirty days a year or at concentrations exceeding the PELs (25 ppm
eight-hour TWA or 125 ppm fifteen-minute STEL) for more than ten days a year.
If you are exposed to MC at concentrations over either of the PELs, your
employer will also be required to have a physician or other licensed health
care professional ensure that you are able to wear the respirator that you are
assigned. Your employer must provide all medical examinations relating to your
MC exposure at a reasonable time and place and at no cost to you.
VIII. Monitoring and Measurement
Procedures
A. Exposure above the Permissible
Exposure Limit:
1. Eight-hour exposure
evaluation: Measurements taken for the purpose of determining employee exposure
under this section are best taken with consecutive samples covering the full
shift. Air samples must be taken in the employee's breathing zone.
2. Monitoring techniques: The sampling and
analysis under this section may be performed by collection of the MC vapor on
two charcoal adsorption tubes in series or other composition adsorption tubes,
with subsequent chemical analysis. Sampling and analysis may also be performed
by instruments such as real-time continuous monitoring systems, portable direct
reading instruments, or passive dosimeters as long as measurements taken using
these methods accurately evaluate the concentration of MC in employees'
breathing zones. OSHA method 80 is an example of a validated method of sampling
and analysis of MC. Copies of this method are available from OSHA or can be
downloaded from the internet at
http://www.osha.gov. The employer has the
obligation of selecting a monitoring method which meets the accuracy and
precision requirements of the standard under his or her unique field
conditions. The standard requires that the method of monitoring must be
accurate, to a ninety-five percent confidence level, to plus or minus
twenty-five percent for concentrations of MC at or above 25 ppm, and to plus or
minus thirty-five percent for concentrations at or below 25 ppm. In addition to
OSHA method 80, there are numerous other methods available for monitoring for
MC in the workplace.
B.
Since many of the duties relating to employee exposure are dependent on the
results of measurement procedures, employers must assure that the evaluation of
employee exposure is performed by a technically qualified person.
IX. Observation of Monitoring
Your employer is required to perform measurements that are
representative of your exposure to MC and you or your designated representative
are entitled to observe the monitoring procedure. You are entitled to observe
the steps taken in the measurement procedure, and to record the results
obtained. When the monitoring procedure is taking place in an area where
respirators or personal protective clothing and equipment are required to be
worn, you or your representative must also be provided with, and must wear,
protective clothing and equipment.
Access To Information
A.
Your employer is required to inform you of the information
contained in this Appendix. In addition, your employer must instruct you in the
proper work practices for using MC, emergency procedures, and the correct use
of protective equipment.
B. Your
employer is required to determine whether you are being exposed to MC. You or
your representative has the right to observe employee measurements and to
record the results obtained. Your employer is required to inform you of your
exposure. If your employer determines that you are being over exposed, he or
she is required to inform you of the actions which are being taken to reduce
your exposure to within permissible exposure limits.
C. Your employer is required to keep records
of your exposures and medical examinations. These records must be kept by the
employer for at least thirty years.
D.
Your employer is required to release your exposure and medical
records to you or your representative upon your request.
E. Your employer is required to provide
labels and safety data sheets (SDS) for all materials, mixtures or solutions
composed of greater than 0.1 percent MC. These materials, mixtures or solutions
would be classified and labeled in accordance with WAC
296-901-140.
X. Common Operations and Controls
The following list includes some common operations in which
exposure to MC may occur and control methods which may be effective in each
case:
Operations |
Controls |
Use as solvent in paint and varnish removers cold
cleaning and ultrasonic cleaning, and as a solvent in furniture stripping.
|
General dilution ventilation; local; manufacture of
aerosols; cold cleaning exhaust ventilation; personal protective equipment;
substitution. |
Use as solvent in vapor degreasing. |
Process enclosure; local exhaust ventilation; chilling
coils; substitution. |
Use as a secondary refrigerant in air scientific
testing. |
General dilution ventilation; local conditioning and
exhaust ventilation; personal protective equipment. |