Acute toxicity - Category 4, Oral
Carcinogenicity, Category 2
Hazardous to the aquatic environment, short-term (Acute) - Category Acute 1
Hazardous to the aquatic environment, long-term (Chronic) - Category Chronic 1
H302 Harmful if swallowed
H351 Suspected of causing cancer
H410 Very toxic to aquatic life with long lasting effects
P264 Wash ... thoroughly after handling.
P270 Do not eat, drink or smoke when using this product.
P203 Obtain, read and follow all safety instructions before use.
P280 Wear protective gloves/protective clothing/eye protection/face protection/hearing protection/...
P273 Avoid release to the environment.
P301+P317 IF SWALLOWED: Get medical help.
P330 Rinse mouth.
P318 IF exposed or concerned, get medical advice.
P391 Collect spillage.
P405 Store locked up.
P501 Dispose of contents/container to an appropriate treatment and disposal facility in accordance with applicable laws and regulations, and product characteristics at time of disposal.
no data available
Fresh air. Refer for medical attention.
Remove contaminated clothes. Rinse and then wash skin with water and soap. Seek medical attention if you feel unwell.
Rinse with plenty of water (remove contact lenses if easily possible).
Rinse mouth. Do NOT induce vomiting. Refer immediately for medical attention.
Excerpt from ERG Guide 133 [Flammable Solids]: Fire may produce irritating and/or toxic gases. Contact may cause burns to skin and eyes. Contact with molten substance may cause severe burns to skin and eyes. Runoff from fire control may cause pollution. (ERG, 2016)
Emergency and supportive measures: Maintain an open airway and assist ventilation if necessary. Treat coma and seizures if they occur. Treat hemolysis and resulting hemoglobinuria if they occur, by intravenous hydration and urinary alkalinization. Naphthalene and paradichlorobenzene
If material on fire or involved in fire: Do not extinguish fire unless flow can be stopped. Use water in flooding quantities as fog. Cool all affected containers with flooding quantities of water. Apply water from as far a distance as possible. Solid streams of water may be ineffective. Use "alcohol" foam, dry chemical or carbon dioxide. Naphthalene, crude or refined
Excerpt from ERG Guide 133 [Flammable Solids]: Flammable/combustible material. May be ignited by friction, heat, sparks or flames. Some may burn rapidly with flare-burning effect. Powders, dusts, shavings, borings, turnings or cuttings may explode or burn with explosive violence. Substance may be transported in a molten form at a temperature that may be above its flash point. May re-ignite after fire is extinguished. (ERG, 2016)
Use water spray, powder, foam, carbon dioxide.
Personal protection: filter respirator for organic gases and vapours adapted to the airborne concentration of the substance. Do NOT let this chemical enter the environment. Do NOT wash away into sewer. Sweep spilled substance into covered containers. If appropriate, moisten first to prevent dusting. Carefully collect remainder. Then store and dispose of according to local regulations.
Personal protection: filter respirator for organic gases and vapours adapted to the airborne concentration of the substance. Do NOT let this chemical enter the environment. Do NOT wash away into sewer. Sweep spilled substance into covered containers. If appropriate, moisten first to prevent dusting. Carefully collect remainder. Then store and dispose of according to local regulations.
Environmental considerations: Water spill: Use natural barriers or oil spill booms to limit spill travel. Use natural deep water pockets, excavated lagoons, or sand bag barriers to trap material at bottom. Remove trapped material with suction hoses. Use mechanical dredges or lifts to remove immobilized masses of pollutants and precipitates. Naphthalene, molten
NO open flames. Closed system, dust explosion-proof electrical equipment and lighting. Prevent deposition of dust. Handling in a well ventilated place. Wear suitable protective clothing. Avoid contact with skin and eyes. Avoid formation of dust and aerosols. Use non-sparking tools. Prevent fire caused by electrostatic discharge steam.
Separated from strong oxidants and food and feedstuffs. Store in an area without drain or sewer access. Provision to contain effluent from fire extinguishing.Without inert-gas blanketing and at the temperature normally used for the storage of molten naphthalene, i.e., 90 deg C, the vapors above the liquid are within the flammability limits. Thus, storage tanks containing molten naphthalene have a combustible mixture in the vapor space and care must be taken to eliminate all sources of ignition around such systems. Naphthalene dust can form explosive mixtures with air which necessitates the design and operation of solid handling systems.
TLV: 10 ppm as TWA; (skin); A3 (confirmed animal carcinogen with unknown relevance to humans).EU-OEL: 50 mg/m3, 10 ppm as TWA.MAK: skin absorption (H); carcinogen category: 2; germ cell mutagen group: 3B
no data available
Ensure adequate ventilation. Handle in accordance with good industrial hygiene and safety practice. Set up emergency exits and the risk-elimination area.
Wear safety spectacles.
Protective gloves. Protective clothing.
Use ventilation (not if powder), local exhaust or breathing protection.
no data available
Solid. Flakes, granules.
White as solid.
Aromatic odor
80.3 °C. Atm. press.:Ca. 101 kPa. Remarks:Pure naphthalene.;78.9 °C. Atm. press.:Ca. 101 kPa.
218.1 °C. Atm. press.:101.3 kPa. Remarks:Naphthalene (pure).;218.2 °C. Atm. press.:101.3 kPa. Remarks:Naphthalene (techn.).
Combustible Solid, but will take some effort to ignite.
Lower flammable limit: 0.9% by volume; Upper flammable limit: 5.9% by volume
78.5 °C. Atm. press.:99 kPa.
>= 526 - <= 587 °C. Atm. press.:1 013 hPa. Remarks:Range of literature data.;540 °C. Atm. press.:1 013 hPa. Remarks:Nabert and Schon 1963: DIN 51794.
no data available
no data available
kinematic viscosity (in mm2/s) = 1.05. Temperature:81.5°C. Remarks:Naphthalene, pure.;kinematic viscosity (in mm2/s) = 1.03. Temperature:85.0°C. Remarks:Naphthalene, pure.;kinematic viscosity (in mm2/s) = 1. Temperature:80.0°C. Remarks:Naphthalene, technical quality.
Insoluble in water
log Pow = 3.4. Temperature:25 °C.
7.2 Pa. Temperature:20 °C.;10.5 Pa. Temperature:25 °C.
1.085. Temperature:24.7 °C.;1.085. Temperature:20 °C.;1.069 g/cm3. Temperature:24.7 °C.
4.4 (vs air)
no data available
On combustion, forms irritating and toxic gases. Reacts with strong oxidants. This generates fire and explosion hazard.
Stable under recommended storage conditions.
Flammable in the presence of a source of ignition, through friction or retained heat.Dust explosion possible if in powder or granular form, mixed with air.Vigorous reactions, sometimes amounting to explosions, can result from the contact between aromatic hydrocarbons, such as NAPHTHALENE, and strong oxidizing agents. They can react exothermically with bases and with diazo compounds. Substitution at the benzene nucleus occurs by halogenation (acid catalyst), nitration, sulfonation, and the Friedel-Crafts reaction. Naphthalene, camphor, glycerol, or turpentine will react violently with chromic anhydride [Haz. Chem. Data 1967. p 68]. Friedel-Crafts acylation of naphthalene using benzoyl chloride, catalyzed by AlCl3, must be conducted above the melting point of the mixture, or the reaction may be violent [Clar, E. et al., Tetrahedron, 1974, 30, 3296].
no data available
Naphthalene ...will react violently with chromic anhydride.
When heated to decomposition it emits acrid smoke and irritating fumes.
no data available
no data available
no data available
no data available
WEIGHT-OF-EVIDENCE CHARACTERIZATION: Using criteria of the 1986 Guidelines for Carcinogen Risk Assessment, naphthalene is classified in group C, a possible human carcinogen. This is based on the inadequate data of carcinogenicity in humans exposed to naphthalene via the oral and inhalation routes, and the limited evidence of carcinogenicity in animals via the inhalation route. Using the 1996 Proposed Guidelines for Carcinogen Risk Assessment, the human carcinogenic potential of naphthalene via the oral or inhalation routes "cannot be determined" at this time based on human and animal data; however, there is suggestive evidence (observations of benign respiratory tumors and one carcinoma in female mice only exposed to naphthalene by inhalation). Additional support includes increase in respiratory tumors associated with exposure to 1-methylnaphthalene. At the present time the mechanism whereby naphthalene produces benign respiratory tract tumors are not fully understood, but are hypothesized to involve oxygenated reactive metabolites produced via the cytochrome P-450 monooxygenase system. However, based on the many negative results obtained in genotoxicity tests, a genotoxic mechanism appears unlikely. HUMAN CARCINOGENICITY DATA: Available data are inadequate to establish a causal association between exposure to naphthalene and cancer in humans. Adequately scaled epidemiological studies designed to examine a possible association between naphthalene exposure and cancer were not located. Overall, no data are available to evaluate the carcinogenic potential in exposed human populations.
Hemolytic anemia has been reported in infants born to mothers who "sniffed" and ingested naphthalene (as mothballs) during pregnancy. The mothers themselves were anemic, but to a lesser extent than the infants. Signs of maternal toxicity (e.g., decreased body weight and lethargy) but no fetal effects were reported in rats and rabbits exposed to naphthalene via gavage. Maternal toxicity (increased mortality and reduced weight gain) and fetotoxicity (reduced number of live pups per litter) were observed in mice exposed via gavage.
The substance may cause effects on the blood. This may result in lesions of blood cells (haemolysis). See Notes. The effects may be delayed. Ingestion could cause death. Medical observation is indicated.
The substance may have effects on the blood. This may result in chronic haemolytic anaemia. The substance may have effects on the eyes. This may result in development of cataract. This substance is possibly carcinogenic to humans.
A harmful contamination of the air will be reached rather slowly on evaporation of this substance at 20°C.
AEROBIC: Although there are some conflicting data, data suggest that naphthalene degrades after a relatively short period of acclimation and that degradation can be rapid in oil polluted water, slow in unpolluted water and that the rate of degradation increases with the concentration of naphthalene(1). In laboratory tests with sewage or sludge inoculums, 100% degradation was obtained in 7 days(2-3) while others got 0% BOD in 5 days(4-5). The lag period for naphthalene degradation decreased as groundwater was more polluted with fuel oil; the lag period was 1.2 and 1.9 days in heavily polluted and slightly polluted water, respectively versus 12 days for unpolluted water(6). Approximately 70% of naphthalene was lost in a pilot-scale municipal wastewater treatment plant due to biodegradation(7). In water, bacteria can utilize naphthalene only when it is in the dissolved state(8). Naphthalene, present at 100 mg/L, reached 2% of its theoretical BOD in 4 weeks using an activated sludge inoculum at 30 mg/L and the Japanese MITI test(9).
The BCF of naphthalene at a water concentration of 0.15 mg/L ranged from 36.5 to 168 in carp, over an 8 week exposure period(1). BCF values in sheepshead minnows (Cyprinodon variegatus) exposed for 36 days to 1.34 and 12.5 ug/L of naphthalene were 692 and 714, respectively(2). According to a classification scheme(3), these BCF values suggest for bioconcentration in aquatic organisms is low to high(SRC). BCF values in amphipods (Diporeia spp) exposed for 28 days to 453.2 to 2201.1 ug/L of naphthalene were 490 to 736(4).
The mean Koc value of naphthalene in 17 soils throughout the US was 871(1). The Koc of naphthalene in 5 different soils from Japan ranged from 440-830(2). In a long term field experiment in Uppsala, Sweden, soils were treated with 7 types of amendments and 1 untreated plot, Koc values were 112-680 for naphthalene(3). In a contaminated soil collected from a railway station in Spain, naphthalene had a log Koc of 3.97(4). The mean Koc value of naphthalene in sediment samples from 2 ponds and 1 river from north Georgia, US was 1,300(5). The log Koc value in sediment was 2.84(6). In 76 sediment samples from 7 sites in New York and 1 in North Carolina, naphthalene had log Koc values of 2.45-5.59(7). According to a classification scheme(8), these Koc values suggest that naphthalene is expected to have high to no mobility in soil(SRC).
no data available
The material can be disposed of by removal to a licensed chemical destruction plant or by controlled incineration with flue gas scrubbing. Do not contaminate water, foodstuffs, feed or seed by storage or disposal. Do not discharge to sewer systems.
Containers can be triply rinsed (or equivalent) and offered for recycling or reconditioning. Alternatively, the packaging can be punctured to make it unusable for other purposes and then be disposed of in a sanitary landfill. Controlled incineration with flue gas scrubbing is possible for combustible packaging materials.
ADR/RID: UN1334 (For reference only, please check.)
IMDG: UN1334 (For reference only, please check.)
IATA: UN1334 (For reference only, please check.)
ADR/RID: NAPHTHALENE, CRUDE or NAPHTHALENE, REFINED (For reference only, please check.)
IMDG: NAPHTHALENE, CRUDE or NAPHTHALENE, REFINED (For reference only, please check.)
IATA: NAPHTHALENE, CRUDE or NAPHTHALENE, REFINED (For reference only, please check.)
ADR/RID: 4.1 (For reference only, please check.)
IMDG: 4.1 (For reference only, please check.)
IATA: 4.1 (For reference only, please check.)
ADR/RID: III (For reference only, please check.)
IMDG: III (For reference only, please check.)
IATA: III (For reference only, please check.)
ADR/RID: Yes
IMDG: Yes
IATA: Yes
no data available
no data available