Ethyl acrylate

Agent Name
Ethyl acrylate
Alternative Name
Acrylic acid, ethyl ester
CAS Number
140-88-5
Formula
C5-H8-O2
Major Category
Plastics & Rubber
Ethyl acrylate formula graphical representation
Synonyms
2-Propenoic acid, ethyl ester; Acrylate d'ethyle [French]; Acrylic acid, ethyl ester; Acrylic acid, ethyl ester (inhibited); Acrylsaeureaethylester [German]; Aethylacrylat [German]; Akrylanem etylu [Polish]; Carboset 511; Ethoxycarbonylethylene; Ethyl 2-propenoate; Ethyl acrylate (natural); Ethyl acrylate, inhibited; Ethyl propenoate; Ethylacrylaat [Dutch]; Ethylakrylat [Czech]; Ethylester kyseliny akrylove [Czech]; Etil acrilato [Italian]; Etilacrilatului [Romanian]; [ChemIDplus]
Category
(Meth)acrylates
Description
Colorless liquid with an acrid odor; [NIOSH]
Sources/Uses
Used to make acrylic resins for fibers, adhesives, binders, surface coatings, textiles, paper, and leather; [ACGIH]
Comments
Liquid causes first degree burns on short exposure. [CHRIS] Pulmonary edema may result from inhalation of high concentrations. [NJ-HSFS] A lachrymator; Causes damage to the liver, kidneys, and lungs in high-dose animal experiments; [HSDB] Danger of skin sensitization; [MAK] Ethyl acrylate, stabilized (UN1917) has warning of explosive polymerization; [ERG 2016]
Biomedical References

Exposure Assessment

Skin Designation (ACGIH)
Insufficient data
TLV (ACGIH)
5 ppm
STEL (ACGIH)
15 ppm
PEL (OSHA)
25 ppm
MAK
2 ppm
IDLH (NIOSH)
300 ppm
Excerpts from Documentation for IDLHs
Human data: Prolonged inhalation exposures at 50 to 75 ppm produced drowsiness, headache, and nausea [Nemec and Bauer 1978].
Vapor Pressure
29 mm Hg
Odor Threshold Low
0.0002 ppm
Odor Threshold High
0.0013 ppm
RD50
315 ppm
Lethal Concentration
LC50 (rat) = 1,414 ppm/4H
Explosive Polymerization
Yes
Explanatory Notes
Detection odor threshold from AIHA (mean = 0.00024 ppm);
Reference Link #2
NFPA
may ignite at ambient temp
ERPG-1
0.01 ppm
ERPG-2
30 ppm
ERPG-3
300 ppm

Adverse Effects

Skin Sensitizer
Yes
Lachrymator
Yes
Toxic Pneumonitis
Yes
Hepatotoxin
Hepatoxic (a) from occupational exposure (secondary effect) or (b) in animal studies or in humans after ingestion
Dermatotoxin
Skin burns
IARC Carcinogen
Possible (2b)
ACGIH Carcinogen
Not Classifiable

Diseases, Processes, and Activities Linked to This Agent

Diseases

Occupational diseases associated with exposure to this agent: