Synonyms
Dipropyl methane; Dipropylmethane; Eptani [Italian]; Gettysolve-C; Heptan [Polish]; Heptanen [Dutch]; Heptyl hydride; Skellysolve C; n-Heptane; [ChemIDplus] UN1206
Category
Aliphatics, Saturated (<C12)
Description
Colorless liquid with a gasoline-like odor; [NIOSH]
Sources/Uses
"Standard for octane-rating determinations (pure normal heptane has zero octane number) anesthetic, solvent, organic synthesis, preparation of laboratory reagents." [HSDB]
Skin Designation (ACGIH)
Insufficient data
Excerpts from Documentation for IDLHs
Other human data: Inhalation of 1,000 ppm for 6 minutes was associated with slight dizziness [Patty and Yant 1929]. Exposure to 5,000 ppm for 4 minutes produced complaints of nausea, a loss of appetite, vertigo, and incoordination [Patty and Yant 1929]. A 15minute exposure to 5,000 ppm produced a state of intoxication characterized by uncontrolled hilarity in some individuals and in others a stupor lasting for 30 minutes after the exposure [Patty and Yant 1929].
Odor Threshold Low
40 ppm
Odor Threshold High
547 ppm
Lethal Concentration
LC50 (rat) = 103,000 mg/m3/4H
Explanatory Notes
Detection odor threshold from AIHA (mean = 230 ppm); Flash point = -4 deg C; TLVs for all heptane isomers (108-08-7, 142-82-6, 565-59-3, 589-34-4, 590-35-2, and 591-76-4); [ACGIH] PEL and MAK for 142-82-6 only; VP from HSDB;
NFPA
may ignite at ambient temp
Neurotoxin
Acute solvent syndrome
Diseases
Occupational diseases associated with exposure to this agent: