<Suppliers Price>

Cuprous chloride

Names

[ CAS No. ]:
7758-89-6

[ Name ]:
Cuprous chloride

[Synonym ]:
CUPROUS CHLORIDE
EINECS 231-842-9
MFCD00010971

Chemical & Physical Properties

[ Density]:
4.14

[ Boiling Point ]:
1490ºC

[ Melting Point ]:
430ºC

[ Molecular Formula ]:
ClCu

[ Molecular Weight ]:
98.99900

[ Flash Point ]:
1490ºC

[ Exact Mass ]:
97.89850

[ LogP ]:
0.68700

[ Vapour Pressure ]:
1.3 mm Hg ( 546 °C)

[ Index of Refraction ]:
1.93

[ Stability ]:
Stable. Incompatible with oxidizing agents, potassium, water. Air, light and moisture sensitive.

MSDS

Toxicological Information

CHEMICAL IDENTIFICATION

RTECS NUMBER :
GL6990000
CHEMICAL NAME :
Copper(I) chloride
CAS REGISTRY NUMBER :
7758-89-6
LAST UPDATED :
199706
DATA ITEMS CITED :
39
MOLECULAR FORMULA :
Cl-Cu
MOLECULAR WEIGHT :
98.99
WISWESSER LINE NOTATION :
.CU..G

HEALTH HAZARD DATA

ACUTE TOXICITY DATA

TYPE OF TEST :
LD50 - Lethal dose, 50 percent kill
ROUTE OF EXPOSURE :
Oral
SPECIES OBSERVED :
Rodent - rat
DOSE/DURATION :
140 mg/kg
TOXIC EFFECTS :
Details of toxic effects not reported other than lethal dose value
TYPE OF TEST :
LD50 - Lethal dose, 50 percent kill
ROUTE OF EXPOSURE :
Oral
SPECIES OBSERVED :
Rodent - mouse
DOSE/DURATION :
347 mg/kg
TOXIC EFFECTS :
Details of toxic effects not reported other than lethal dose value
TYPE OF TEST :
LC50 - Lethal concentration, 50 percent kill
ROUTE OF EXPOSURE :
Inhalation
SPECIES OBSERVED :
Rodent - mouse
DOSE/DURATION :
1008 mg/m3
TOXIC EFFECTS :
Details of toxic effects not reported other than lethal dose value
TYPE OF TEST :
LD50 - Lethal dose, 50 percent kill
ROUTE OF EXPOSURE :
Subcutaneous
SPECIES OBSERVED :
Rodent - guinea pig
DOSE/DURATION :
100 mg/kg
TOXIC EFFECTS :
Details of toxic effects not reported other than lethal dose value

MUTATION DATA

TYPE OF TEST :
Cytogenetic analysis
TEST SYSTEM :
Rodent - rat Ascites tumor
DOSE/DURATION :
120 mg/kg
REFERENCE :
GANNA2 Gann. Japanese Journal of Cancer Research. (Tokyo, Japan) V.1-75, 1907-84. For publisher information, see JJCREP. Volume(issue)/page/year: 54,155,1963 *** OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE LIMITS *** OEL-ARAB Republic of Egypt:TWA 0.1 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-AUSTRALIA:TWA 0.2 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-AUSTRALIA:TWA 1 mg(Cu)/m3 (dust) JAN 1993 OEL-BELGIUM:TWA 0.2 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-BELGIUM:TWA 1 mg(Cu)/m3 (dust) JAN 1993 OEL-DENMARK:TWA 0.1 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-DENMARK:TWA 1 mg(Cu)/m3 (dust) JAN 1993 OEL-FINLAND:TWA 0.2 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-FINLAND:TWA 1 mg(Cu)/m3 (dust) JAN 1993 OEL-FRANCE:TWA 0.2 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-FRANCE:TWA 1 mg(Cu)/m3;STEL 2 mg(Cu)/m3 (dust) JAN 1993 OEL-GERMANY:TWA 0.1 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-GERMANY:TWA 1 mg(Cu)/m3 (dust) JAN 1993 OEL-HUNGARY:TWA 0.2 mg(Cu)/m3;STEL 0.4 mg(Cu)/m3 (dust) JAN 1993 OEL-INDIA:TWA 0.2 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-THE NETHERLANDS:TWA 02 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-THE NETHERLANDS:TWA 1 mg(Cu)/m3 (dust) JAN 1993 OEL-THE PHILIPPINES:TWA 1.0 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-POLAND:TWA 0.1 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-RUSSIA:STEL 0.5 ppm (1 mg(Cu)/m3) (dust) JAN 1993 OEL-RUSSIA:STEL 5 mg/m3 JAN 1993 OEL-SWEDEN:TWA 0.2 mg(Cu)/m3 (resp. dust) JAN 1993 OEL-SWEDEN:TWA 0.2 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-SWEDEN:TWA 1 mg(Cu)/m3 (total dust) JAN 1993 OEL-SWITZERLAND:TWA 0.1 mg(Cu)/m3;STEL 0.2 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-SWITZERLAND:TWA 1 mg(Cu)/m3;STEL 1 mg(Cu)/m3 JAN 1993 OEL-THAILAND:TWA 0.1 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-THAILAND:TWA 1 mg(Cu)/m3 JAN 1993 OEL-UNITED KINGDOM:TWA 0.2 mg(Cu)/m3 (fume) JAN 1993 OEL-UNITED KINGDOM:TWA 1 mg(Cu)/m3 JAN 1993 *** NIOSH STANDARDS DEVELOPMENT AND SURVEILLANCE DATA *** NIOSH OCCUPATIONAL EXPOSURE SURVEY DATA : NOHS - National Occupational Hazard Survey (1974) NOHS Hazard Code - 83435 No. of Facilities: 618 (estimated) No. of Industries: 12 No. of Occupations: 9 No. of Employees: 4876 (estimated) NOES - National Occupational Exposure Survey (1983) NOES Hazard Code - 83435 No. of Facilities: 927 (estimated) No. of Industries: 12 No. of Occupations: 25 No. of Employees: 11954 (estimated) No. of Female Employees: 1964 (estimated)

Safety Information

[ Symbol ]:

GHS05, GHS07, GHS09

[ Signal Word ]:
Danger

[ Hazard Statements ]:
H302-H315-H318-H410

[ Precautionary Statements ]:
P273-P280-P305 + P351 + P338-P501

[ Personal Protective Equipment ]:
dust mask type N95 (US);Eyeshields;Faceshields;Gloves

[ Hazard Codes ]:
Xn:Harmful

[ Risk Phrases ]:
R22;R50/53

[ Safety Phrases ]:
S22-S60-S61

[ RIDADR ]:
UN 1789/2802

[ WGK Germany ]:
2

[ RTECS ]:
GL6990000

[ Packaging Group ]:
III

[ Hazard Class ]:
8

[ HS Code ]:
2827399000

Synthetic Route

Precursor & DownStream

Customs

[ HS Code ]: 2827399000

Articles

Stable chlorine isotope analysis of chlorinated acetic acids using gas chromatography/quadrupole mass spectrometry.

Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom. 29 , 2341-8, (2015)

The environmental occurrence of chlorinated acetic acids (CAAs) has been extensively studied, but the sources and transport are still not yet fully understood. A promising approach for source apportio...

Expedient synthesis of tetrasubstituted pyrroles via a copper-catalyzed cascade inter-/intramolecular cyclization of 1,3-enynes carry a nitro group with amines.

Org. Biomol. Chem. 13(9) , 2786-92, (2015)

Various tetrasubstituted pyrroles/pyrazoles have been prepared from nitro-substituted 1,3-enynes with aromatic amines/hydrazines via a copper-catalyzed cascade aza-Michael addition, cyclization and ar...

pH-Dependent Galvanic Replacement of Supported and Colloidal Cu2O Nanocrystals with Gold and Palladium.

Small 11 , 3942-53, (2015)

Galvanic replacement reactions (GRRs) on nanoparticles (NPs) are typically performed between two metals, i.e., a solid metal NP and a replacing salt solution of a more noble metal. The solution pH in ...


More Articles


Related Compounds

The content on this webpage is sourced from various professional data sources. If you have any questions or concerns regarding the content, please feel free to contact service1@chemsrc.com.