1,3-Butadiene
Formula: C4H6 | CAS: 106-99-0
Detecting butadiene: Studies have consistently shown an association between occupational exposure to 1,3-butadiene and an increased incidence of leukaemia.
Detecting butadiene to limit exposure risks
Exposure to 1,3-butadiene mainly occurs among workers who breath contaminated air on the job. Other sources of exposure include automobile exhaust; tobacco smoke; and polluted air and water near chemical, plastic, or rubber facilities.
Workers who are present in the below industries could be more liable to high exposure levels;
- synthetic elastomer (rubber and latex) production
- petroleum refining
- secondary lead smelting
- water treatment
- agricultural fungicides
- production of raw material for nylon, and the use of fossil fuels.
1,3-butadiene is known to be a human carcinogen based on sufficient evidence of carcinogenicity from studies in humans, including epidemiological and mechanistic studies. 1,3-butadiene was first listed in the Fifth Annual Report on Carcinogens in 1989 as reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen based on sufficient evidence of carcinogenicity from studies in experimental animals. The listing was revised, known to be a human carcinogen in the Ninth Report on Carcinogens in 2000.
– NTP Classification
What happens to 1,3-butadiene when it enters the environment?
1,3-butadiene has high volatility and low-water solubility. When released to the environment from industrial or non-industrial sources, butadiene evaporates to the air, even from water and soil; and butadiene breaks down quickly in sunlight and degrades in the air with a half-life of less than two hours. Environmental sources include industrial releases from butadiene production and use, automobile exhaust, cigarette smoke and other combustion sources.
Gas Factsheet
Everything you need to know about detecting butadiene
Our Gas Factsheets which is available to download below provides you with key information on the exposure limits and the locations of where potentially harmful gases can occur. We also share information on gas detection monitoring techniques and equipment that can help you manage gas detection in the workplace, for worker and site safety.
Detecting Butadiene
Formula: C4H6 | CAS: 106-99-0
Synonyms: buta-1,3-diene, biethylene, bivinyl, butadiene, divinyl, erythrene, vinylethylene