Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Rabbits ethyl acetate toxicity

Properties Colorless clear liq., benzene odor sol. in alcohol, benzene, ether, acetone, chloroform, petrol, ether, ethyl acetate misc. with most org. soivs. very si. sol. in water m.w. 92.13 dens. 0.866 (20/4 C) vapor pressure 36.7 mm Hg (30 C) m.p. -94.5 C b.p. 110.7 C flash pt. (CC) 4.4 C ref. index 1.4967 (20 C) KB value 105 Toxicology ACGIH TLV/TWA 100 ppm STEL 150 ppm LD50 (oral, rat) 7.53 g/kg, (skin, rabbit) 12,124 mg/kg toxic by ing., inh., IP, and skin absorption irritant to eyes, skin, respiratory tract severe dermatitis on direct contact ing. may cause lung aspiration overexposure by inh. may cause CNS excitation/depression high cones, may cause paresthesia, vision disturbances, dizziness, nausea, headache, narcosis, death experimental teratogen. [Pg.4444]

REPELLENT. 1. A substance that causes and insect of animal to turn away from it or reject it as food. Repellents may be in the form of gases (olfactory), liquids, or solids (gustatory). Standard repellents for mosquitos, ticks, etc., arc dtronella oil, dimethyl phthalatc, w-butylmcsityl oxide oxalate, DEET, and 2-ethyl hexanediol-1,3. Actidione is the most effective rodent repellent, but is too toxic and too costly to use. Copper naphthenate and lime/sulfnr mixtures protect vegetation against rabbits and deer. Shark repellents are copper acetate or formic acid mixed with ground asbestos. Bird repellents are chiefly based on taste, but this sense varies widely with the type of bird so that generalization is impossible. G -Naphthol, naphthalene, sandalwood oil, quinine, and ammonium compounds have been used, with no uniformity or result. [Pg.1436]


See other pages where Rabbits ethyl acetate toxicity is mentioned: [Pg.214]    [Pg.2831]    [Pg.2222]    [Pg.2401]    [Pg.1081]    [Pg.1185]    [Pg.1185]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.654]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.36 ]




SEARCH



Ethyl acetate toxicity

Rabbits

© 2024 chempedia.info