- Diisononyl phthalate
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Diisononyl phthalate[1] Identifiers Abbreviations DINP CAS number 28553-12-0 , 68515-48-0 PubChem 590836 ChemSpider 513622 ChEBI CHEBI:35459 Jmol-3D images Image 1 - O=C(OCCCCCCC(C)C)c1ccccc1C(=O)OCCCCCCC(C)C
- InChI=1S/C26H42O4/c1-21(2)15-9-5-7-13-19-29-25(27)23-17-11-12-18-24(23)26(28)30-20-14-8-6-10-16-22(3)4/h11-12,17-18,21-22H,5-10,13-16,19-20H2,1-4H3
Key: HBGGXOJOCNVPFY-UHFFFAOYSA-N
InChI=1/C26H42O4/c1-21(2)15-9-5-7-13-19-29-25(27)23-17-11-12-18-24(23)26(28)30-20-14-8-6-10-16-22(3)4/h11-12,17-18,21-22H,5-10,13-16,19-20H2,1-4H3
Key: HBGGXOJOCNVPFY-UHFFFAOYAX
Properties Molecular formula C26H42O4 Molar mass 418.609 g/mol Appearance Oily viscous liquid Density 0.98 g/cm3 Melting point -43 °C, 230 K, -45 °F
Boiling point 244-252 °C at 0.7 kPa
Solubility in water <0.01 g/mL at 20 °C Hazards Flash point 221 °C (c.c.) Autoignition
temperature380 °C (verify) (what is: / ?)
Except where noted otherwise, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C, 100 kPa)Infobox references Diisononyl phthalate (DINP) is a phthalate used as a plasticizer in e.g. food contact materials[2]. DINP is typically a mixture of chemical compounds consisting of various isononyl esters of phthalic acid.
The European Union has set a maximum specific migration limit from food contact materials of 9 mg/kg food for the sum of diisononyl phthalates and diisodecyl phthalates [3].
See also
References
- ^ Diisononyl phthalate at Inchem.org
- ^ Diisononyl phthalate at chemicalland21.com
- ^ "EU legislative list for food contact materials". http://ec.europa.eu/food/food/chemicalsafety/foodcontact/legisl_list_en.htm.
Health issues of plastics and Polyhalogenated compounds (PHCs) Plasticizers: Phthalates Miscellaneous plasticizers Monomers Bisphenol A (BPA, in Polycarbonates) · Vinyl chloride (in PVC)Miscellaneous additives incl. PHCs Health issues Miscellanea PVC · Plastic recycling · Plastic bottle · Vinyl chloride · Dioxins · Polystyrene · Styrofoam · PTFE (Teflon) · California Proposition 65 · List of environmental health hazards · Persistent organic pollutant · European REACH regulation · Japan Toxic Substances Law · Toxic Substances Control ActThis article about an ester is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.