| Molecular Formula | C2H4Cl2 |
| Molar Mass | 98.96 |
| Density | 1,18 g/cm3 |
| Melting Point | 235℃ |
| Boling Point | 57°C |
| Flash Point | -6°C |
| Water Solubility | 5.057g/L(25 ºC) |
| Solubility | Miscible with ethanol (U.S. EPA, 1985) |
| Vapor Presure | 227 at 25 °C (quoted, Howard, 1990) |
| Appearance | neat |
| Merck | 3810 |
| BRN | 1696901 |
| Storage Condition | Refrigerator |
| Stability | Stable. Highly flammable. Vapour/gas mixtures explosive. Incompatible with plastics, many organic materials. Reacts with metals, oxidizing agents. |
| Refractive Index | 1.42213 (20℃) |
| Physical and Chemical Properties | Chemical properties colorless transparent liquid. Melting point -97.6 ℃, boiling point 57.3 ℃, relative density 1.1835(15/4 ℃), flash point -5 ℃, refractive index 1.4164, soluble in general organic solvents such as alcohol and ether, insoluble in water, with chloroform smell. |
| Use | Uses Used as solvent and heat-sensitive extractant. Industrial applications are not as wide as 1, 2-dichloroethane. |
| Risk Codes | R11 - Highly Flammable R22 - Harmful if swallowed R36/37 - Irritating to eyes and respiratory system. R52/53 - Harmful to aquatic organisms, may cause long-term adverse effects in the aquatic environment. R39/23/24/25 - R23/24/25 - Toxic by inhalation, in contact with skin and if swallowed. |
| Safety Description | S16 - Keep away from sources of ignition. S23 - Do not breathe vapour. S26 - In case of contact with eyes, rinse immediately with plenty of water and seek medical advice. S36 - Wear suitable protective clothing. S61 - Avoid release to the environment. Refer to special instructions / safety data sheets. S45 - In case of accident or if you feel unwell, seek medical advice immediately (show the label whenever possible.) S36/37 - Wear suitable protective clothing and gloves. S7 - Keep container tightly closed. |
| UN IDs | 2362 |
| WGK Germany | 3 |
| RTECS | KI0175000 |
| TSCA | T |
| Hazard Note | Flammable/Irritant |
| Hazard Class | 3.1 |
| Packing Group | II |
| Toxicity | Acute oral LD50 for rats 725 mg/kg (quoted, RTECS, 1985). |
| Relative polarity | 0.269 |
| Henry's Law Constant | 4.84 at 25°C (batch air stripping-GC, Bobadilla et al., 2003) |
| Exposure Limits | NIOSH REL: TWA 100 ppm (400 mg/m3), IDLH 3,000 ppm; OSHA PEL: TWA 100 ppm; ACGIH TLV: TWA 100 ppm (adopted). |
| EPA chemical information | 1,1-Dichloroethane (75-34-3) |
Production method
Industrially, vinyl chloride is obtained by liquid phase reaction of 1, 1-dichloroethane with hydrogen chloride under the catalysis of aluminum chloride, ferric chloride or zinc chloride. In the production of 1, 2-dichloroethane from ethylene chlorination, a small amount of 1, 1-dichloroethane is also produced by-product.
category
Flammable liquids
Toxicity classification
Poisoning
Acute toxicity
oral-rat LD50: 725 mg/kg; Inhalation-rat LC50: 13000 PPM/4 hours
explosive hazard characteristics
Mix with air to form an explosive mixture;
flammability hazard characteristics
Flammable; heat decomposes toxic chloride gases, such as phosgene
storage and transportation features
The warehouse is ventilated and dry at low temperature; stored separately from the oxidant
Fire extinguishing agent
Foam, Dry Powder, Carbon Dioxide
occupational standards
TLV-TWA 810 mg/m3; STEL 1010 mg/m3
| toxic substance data | 75-34-3(Hazardous Substances Data) |
| immediate threat to life and health concentration | 3,000 ppm |