1,3-Butadiene

Agent Name
1,3-Butadiene
Alternative Name
Butadiene
CAS Number
106-99-0
Formula
C4-H6
Major Category
Plastics & Rubber
1,3-Butadiene formula graphical representation
Synonyms
Biethylene; Bivinyl; Buta-1,3-dieen [Dutch]; Buta-1,3-dien [German]; Buta-1,3-diene; Butadieen [Dutch]; Butadien [Polish]; Butadiene monomer; Butadiene-1,3-uninhibited; Divinyl; Erythrene; UN 1010; Vinylethylene; alpha,gamma-Butadiene; [ChemIDplus] UN1010
Category
Other Monomers
Description
Colorless gas with a mild aromatic or gasoline-like odor. [Note: A liquid below 24 degrees F. Shipped as a liquefied compressed gas.] Vapor density = 1.87 (heavier than air); [HSDB]
Sources/Uses
Used in the production of synthetic rubber for motor vehicle tires; also used in styrene-butadiene polymers, acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene resins, and other compounds; [ACGIH] In a study of Swedish refinery workers, "The exposure to 1,3-butadiene among all exposure groups was low (95% of all samples were below 10 ug/m3) in relation to the Swedish OEL, of 1000 ug/m3." [PMID 28578463]
Comments
Synthetic rubber workers in the past had increased incidence of leukemia attributed to chronic and heavy exposure to 1,3-butadiene. Acutely, it is not very toxic. [Lewis R. "Overview of the Rubber Industry and Tire Manufacturing." in Occupational Medicine STAR 14(4): 710, 1999.] In reproductive studies of mice, 1,3-butadiene causes testicular damage. Some animal studies found birth defects after high doses during early pregnancy. [Frazier, p. 277-8] Causes CNS depression at high concentrations; May have effects on the bone marrow; [ICSC] "Germ cell mutagens that have shown to increase the mutant frequency in the progeny of exposed mammals." [MAK] "The excesses were attributable to both chronic lymphocytic and chronic myelogenous leukemia, with significant exposure-response relationships between cumulative exposure to butadiene and mortality from both leukaemia types." There is sufficient evidence that 1,3-butadiene causes cancer of haematolymphatic organs in studies of styrene-butadiene rubber and butadiene-monomer workers. [IARC Monograph Volume 100F (2012)] Butadienes, stabilized (UN1010) has warning of explosive polymerization; [ERG 2016]
Restricted
See Occupational Safety & Health Standard--29CFR1910.1051
Biomedical References

Exposure Assessment

BEI
1,2 Dihydroxy-4-(N-acetylcysteinyl)-butane in urine = 2.5 mg/L at end of shift; Mixture of N-1 and N-2-(hydroxybutenyl)valine hemoglobin (Hb) adducts in blood = 2.5 pmol/g Hb sampling time not critical;
Skin Designation (ACGIH)
Insufficient data
TLV (ACGIH)
2 ppm
PEL (OSHA)
1 ppm, STEL(OSHA) = 5 ppm
IDLH (NIOSH)
2000 ppm
Excerpts from Documentation for IDLHs
Other animal data: Exposures to 6,700 ppm for 7.5 hours/day, 6 days/week for 8 months caused no progressive injury in rats, guinea pigs, rabbits, or 1 dog [Carpenter et al. 1944]. Human data: Narcosis did not occur in volunteers exposed to 8,000 ppm for 8 hours [Carpenter et al. 1944]. Exposure to 10,000 ppm for 5 minutes has resulted in slight irritation and dryness of the nose and mouth with some increase in pulse rate but no effect on blood pressure or respiration [Shugaev 1968].
Odor Threshold Low
0.09 ppm
Odor Threshold High
76 ppm
Lethal Concentration
LC50 (rat) = 285,000 mg/m3/4H
Explosive Polymerization
Yes
Explanatory Notes
IDLH = 10% LEL (lower explosive limit); Detection odor threshold from AIHA (mean = 0.45 ppm); Flash point = -105 deg F;
Half Life
No reports found; [TDR, p. 224]
NFPA
burn readily
ERPG-1
10 ppm
ERPG-2
200 ppm
ERPG-3
5,000 ppm

Adverse Effects

Neurotoxin
Acute solvent syndrome
Reproductive Toxin
Yes
IARC Carcinogen
Established
NTP Carcinogen
Human carcinogen
ACGIH Carcinogen
Suspected Human

Diseases, Processes, and Activities Linked to This Agent

Diseases

Occupational diseases associated with exposure to this agent:

Processes

Industrial Processes with risk of exposure:

Activities

Activities with risk of exposure: