Fresh air and treat symptomatically, flush areas of contact with copious amounts of water
Other Information
Metabolizes to carbon monoxide when inhaled, hydrogen chloride released when mixed with water, incompatible with strong oxidizers, caustics, chemically active metals, and nitric acid
Chemical of the Week Part 2 - Methylene Chloride
by Dave Donohue
Jun 21
Chemical of the Week – Part 2
Hazard Profile
Chemical Name and Pseudonyms
Methylene Chloride, Dichloromethane, Methylene Dichloride, 75-09-2
UN Number
1593
Chemical Formula
CH2Cl2
Hazards
Skin irritant, CNS depressant, metabolizes to form Carbon Monoxide in blood stream, forms acids when mixed with water.
PPE Considerations
Splash Protective Garment, SFPC, or multi-threat ensemble with SCBA
Fire Fighting Considerations
Water, CO 2, dry chemical, ATC AFFF
Decontamination
Ventilation, soap and water, flooding water flushing
Detection and Monitoring
Colormetric, electrochemical sensor, PID IP = 11.32 ev, FTIR, spectroscopy
Chemical and Physical Properties
Physical State
Colorless liquid with chloroform like odor
Vapor Pressure
~350 mmHg
Boiling Point
~104oF
Vapor Density
~2.9
Specific Gravity
~1.3
Miscibility
Miscible
Flash Point
-
LEL/UEL
13% / 23%
Autoignition Temp
1032oF
pH
-
Toxicity
IDLH
Ca, ~2300 ppm
PEL/REL/STEL
24 ppm/Ca/125 ppm
LD50
2000 mg/kg
LC50
53 mg/l
Radioactive (Yes/No)
No
Medical
Toxicological Considerations
Toxic by all routes.
Signs/Symptoms of Exposure
Respiratory symptoms, skin irritation and burns, eye damage, chest tightness, CNS
Medical Treatment
Fresh air and treat symptomatically, flush areas of contact with copious amounts of water
Other Information
Metabolizes to carbon monoxide when inhaled, hydrogen chloride released when mixed with water, incompatible with strong oxidizers, caustics, chemically active metals, and nitric acid
Chemical Structure