Nickel carbonyl

Agent Name
Nickel carbonyl
CAS Number
13463-39-3
Formula
C4-Ni-O4
Major Category
Toxic Gases & Vapors
Nickel carbonyl formula graphical representation
Synonyms
Nickel tetracarbonyl; Tetracarbonyl nickel; [NIOSH] UN1259
Category
Other Toxic Gases & Vapors
Description
Colorless to yellow liquid with a musty odor. [Note: A gas above 110 degrees F.] [NIOSH]
Sources/Uses
Used to refine nickel by the Mond process; also used to deposit nickel films and as a catalyst to produce organic chemicals; Generated in reactions between fine nickel powder and carbon monoxide; [ACGIH] Workers are exposed mainly in nickel refining. Exposure may occur in electroplating and in the electronics industry. Smokers may be exposed. [Sullivan, p. 981-2]
Comments
Liquid causes second or third degree burns after short contact; [CHRIS] Highly toxic by inhalation with poor warning properties; Pulmonary edema may be delayed for 12 to 36 hours after exposure. Nickel carbonyl causes liver damage in inhalation and intravenous studies of animals. The estimated lethal dose in humans is 30 ppm for 340 minutes with death secondary to lung injury. Urinary nickel levels are useful in medical surveillance of exposed workers. Epidemiology studies provide equivocal evidence that nickel carbonyl causes lung cancer.[ACGIH] The chest x-ray may show evidence of pulmonary edema after nickel carbonyl exposure. [Sullivan, Table 16.3] Workers exposed to soluble nickel salts had increased nasal dysplasia and lung fibrosis. [Ullmann] Lung injury after nickel carbonyl exposure includes delayed pulmonary edema and rapidly infiltrating fibrosis. [Harber, p. 499] Acute findings following heavy exposure may include headache, delirium, seizures, and coma. [LaDou, p. 480] In high-dose animal studies, nickel and nickel carbonyl cause birth defects. [Frazier] See "ORGANOMETALS." See "Nickel" and linked occupational diseases.
Biomedical References

Exposure Assessment

Skin Designation (ACGIH)
Insufficient data
TIH
Yes
Ceiling (ACGIH)
0.05 ppm, as Ni
PEL (OSHA)
0.001 ppm, as Ni
IDLH (NIOSH)
2 ppm, as Ni
Excerpts from Documentation for IDLHs
Other human data: It has been stated that 3 ppm for 30 minutes is the probable short­term exposure limit [Kincaid et al. 1956].
Vapor Pressure
400 mm Hg
Odor Threshold Low
0.5 ppm
Odor Threshold High
3 ppm
Lethal Concentration
LC50 (rat) = 35 ppm/30 min
Explanatory Notes
Odor threshold from AIHA; Vapors are heavier than air and can explode in air at 20 deg C; [Sullivan, p. 981] VP from HSDB;
Reference Link #2
NFPA
may ignite at ambient temp

Adverse Effects

Skin Sensitizer
Yes
Asthma
Yes
Toxic Pneumonitis
Yes
Fibrogenic
Yes
Neurotoxin
Other CNS neurotoxin
Hepatotoxin
Hepatoxic (a) from occupational exposure (secondary effect) or (b) in animal studies or in humans after ingestion
Reproductive Toxin
Yes
Dermatotoxin
Skin burns
IARC Carcinogen
Established
NTP Carcinogen
Human carcinogen
ACGIH Carcinogen
Confirmed Animal

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: