UNOCAL NATURAL GAS
Flammability | 4 | |
Toxicity | 2 | |
Body Contact | 3 | |
Reactivity | 1 | |
Chronic | 2 | |
SCALE: Min/Nil=0 Low=1 Moderate=2 High=3 Extreme=4 |
Used according to manufacturer' s directions.
Extremely flammable.
Risk of explosion if heated under confinement.
Not normally a hazard due to physical form of product. Considered an unlikely route of entry in commercial/industrial environments.
If applied to the eyes, this material causes severe eye damage.
The material is not thought to produce adverse health effects or skin irritation following contact (as classified using animal models). Nevertheless, good hygiene practice requires that exposure be kept to a minimum and that suitable gloves be used in an occupational setting. Entry into the blood-stream, through, for example, cuts, abrasions or lesions, may produce systemic injury with harmful effects. Examine the skin prior to the use of the material and ensure that any external damage is suitably protected.
Inhalation of vapors or aerosols (mists, fumes), generated by the material during the course of normal handling, may be damaging to the health of the individual. There is some evidence to suggest that the material can cause respiratory irritation in some persons. The body's response to such irritation can cause further lung damage. Inhalation of non-toxic gases may cause: · CNS effects: headache, confusion, dizziness, stupor, seizures and coma; · respiratory: shortness of breath and rapid breathing; · cardiovascular: collapse and irregular heart beats; · gastrointestinal: mucous membrane irritation, nausea and vomiting. Inhalation of vapours may cause drowsiness and dizziness. This may be accompanied by narcosis, reduced alertness, loss of reflexes, lack of coordination and vertigo. Carbon dioxide is an odourless gas which gives very poor warning of exposure. The gas can produce rapid unconsciousness and death from oxygen deficiency at concentrations of 10% in air. Even concentrations of 3% may produce shortness of breath and headache. Carbon dioxide is the most powerful cerebral vasodilator known. High levels, even in the presence of sufficient oxygen may produce rapid circulatory insufficiency leading to coma and death. Continuous exposure to 1.5% carbon dioxide may cause changes in some physiological processes. Increased concentrations of carbon dioxide in blood affect the rate of breathing. Even at low concentrations, regular exposure to carbon dioxide is potentially harmful as a consequence of cellular membrane effects and biochemical alterations; these may result in increased concentration of bicarbonate ions and acidosis. High concentrations of carbon dioxide (2-10%) may produce an acidic taste, dyspnoea, headache, vertigo, nausea, laboured breathing, weakness, drowsiness, mental confusion, and increased blood pressure, pulse and respiratory rate. Exposure to 10% for a few minutes reportedly produces visual disturbances, tinnitus, tremors, profuse perspiration, restlessness, paraesthaesia, general feeling of discomfort, loss of consciousness, and coma. Concentrations of 25-50% may cause coma and convulsions within one minute. Tachycardia and arrhythmias are possible. Concentrations of 50% may cause symptoms of hypocalcaemia including carpopedal spasms. Excessive carbon dioxide for a period of time (not more than five minutes) was reported to cause visual effects, enlargement of the blind spot, photophobia, loss of convergence and accommodation, and deficient dark adaptation as well as headache, insomnia and personality changes (largely depression and irritability). Even when there is sufficient oxygen present to prevent simple asphyxiation, high concentrations of carbon dioxide may cause adverse effects by interfering with its normal elimination from the body. Initial overexposure to carbon dioxide results in an compensatory increase in both rate and depth of ventilation. Beyond a certain point, however, this may reverse to hypoventilation resulting in respiratory acidosis. Death from asphyxia may occur if the concentration and duration of exposure are sufficient. If exposure to highly concentrated atmosphere of gas is prolonged this may lead to narcosis, unconsciousness, even coma and unless resuscitated - death. Material is highly volatile and may quickly form a concentrated atmosphere in confined or unventilated areas. Vapor is heavier than air and may displace and replace air in breathing zone, acting as a simple asphyxiant. This may happen with little warning of overexposure.
Principal route of occupational exposure to the gas is by inhalation. Limited evidence suggests that repeated or long-term occupational exposure may produce cumulative health effects involving organs or biochemical systems. There is some evidence to provide a presumption that human exposure to the material may result in impaired fertility on the basis of: some evidence in animal studies of impaired fertility in the absence of toxic effects, or evidence of impaired fertility occurring at around the same dose levels as other toxic effects but which is not a secondary non- specific consequence of other toxic effects. There is some evidence that human exposure to the material may result in developmental toxicity. This evidence is based on animal studies where effects have been observed in the absence of marked maternal toxicity, or at around the same dose levels as other toxic effects but which are not secondary non-specific consequences of the other toxic effects. Although prolonged exposure to carbon dioxide, at levels up to 1.5% in inhaled air, are well tolerated, calcium/ phosphorus metabolism may be affected. Serum levels of calcium and urinary phosphorus progressively fall. Prolonged exposure at 2% concentration, may produce deepened respiration. At 3%, impaired performance is evident. Tolerance may develop however following long exposure to low levels. Reproductive effects may occur in animals. Constant or exposure over long periods to mixed hydrocarbons may produce stupor with dizziness, weakness and visual disturbance, weight loss and anemia, and reduced liver and kidney function. Skin exposure may result in drying and cracking and redness of the skin. Chronic exposure to lighter hydrocarbons can cause nerve damage, peripheral neuropathy, bone marrow dysfunction and psychiatric disorders as well as damage the liver and kidneys.