Acrolein
CASRN 107-02-8
- Toxicological Review (PDF) (106 pp, 332 K)
- IRIS Summary (PDF) (25 pp, 176 K)
IRIS Toxicological Review of Acrolein (2003 Final)
Overview
Citation
U.S. EPA. IRIS Toxicological Review of Acrolein (2003 Final). U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC, 2003.
Background
Acrolein is a colorless to yellowish flammable liquid with a disagreeable, choking odor. The principal use of acrolein is as an intermediate in the synthesis of acrylic acid, which is used to make acrylates, and of DL-methionine, an essential amino acid used as an animal feed supplement. The most important direct use of acrolein is as a biocide: it is used as a herbicide and to control algae, aquatic weeds and mollusks in recirculating process water systems. Combustion of fuels represents a major source of emissions of acrolein to the atmosphere. No chronic studies of humans exposed to acrolein are available.
History/Chronology
Date | Description |
---|---|
May 2003 | EPA released the final tox report and summary document and posted these to the IRIS database |
Download(s)
This document has been reviewed in accordance with U.S. Environmental Protection Agency policy and approved for publication. Mention of trade names or commercial products does not constitute endorsement or recommendation for use.
- IRIS Toxicological Review and Summary Documents for Acrolein (2003 Final) (PDF) (106 pp, 340 KB, about PDF)
- IRIS Summary of Acrolein
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