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Determination of Noncancer Chronic Reference Exposure Levels, Appendix D3: Chlorine Dioxide ~OEHHA 2008
Determination of Noncancer Chronic Reference Exposure Levels, Appendix D3: Chlorine Dioxide ~OEHHA 2008
****!!!!****!!!! "Chlorine dioxide is used directly as a bleaching agent for cellulose, textiles, flour, leather, oils, and beeswax. It is also used in the purification of water and as a bactericide and antiseptic." "The annual statewide industrial emissions ... were estimated to be 1136 pounds of chlorine dioxide" "Case reports of human occupational exposure to chlorine dioxide have shown that 19 ppm was fatal to one worker and 5 ppm was definitely irritating. Seven out of 12 workers exposed regularly to chlorine dioxide at levels generally below 0.1 ppm (0.28 mg/m3) reported symptoms of ocular and respiratory irritation leading to slight bronchitis. However, the authors ascribed the bronchitis to occasional acute excursions of chlorine dioxide levels"
·oehha.ca.gov·
Determination of Noncancer Chronic Reference Exposure Levels, Appendix D3: Chlorine Dioxide ~OEHHA 2008
CDC - Immediately Dangerous to Life or Health Concentrations (IDLH): Chlorine dioxide - NIOSH Publications and Products
CDC - Immediately Dangerous to Life or Health Concentrations (IDLH): Chlorine dioxide - NIOSH Publications and Products
{OSHA CURRENT LIMITS} NIOSH REL: 0.1 ppm (0.3 mg/m3) TWA, 0.3 ppm (0.9 mg/m3) STEL. Current OSHA PEL: 0.1 ppm (0.3 mg/m3) TWA. 1989 OSHA PEL: 0.1 ppm (0.3 mg/m3) TWA, 0.3 ppm (0.9 mg/m3) STEL. 1993-1994 ACGIH TLV: 0.1 ppm (0.28 mg/m3) TWA, 0.3 ppm (0.83 mg/m3) STEL
·cdc.gov·
CDC - Immediately Dangerous to Life or Health Concentrations (IDLH): Chlorine dioxide - NIOSH Publications and Products
{IRIS docs: Core 2000 doc} Toxicological Review of Chlorine Dioxide and Chlorite, In Support of Summary Information on the Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) ~IRIS, EPA
{IRIS docs: Core 2000 doc} Toxicological Review of Chlorine Dioxide and Chlorite, In Support of Summary Information on the Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) ~IRIS, EPA
2000 Sept. {Evaluating RfC, RfD, carcinogenicity. Includes **injection report.} "what exists in water or the stomach is a mixture of these chemical species (i.e., chlorine dioxide, chlorite, chlorate) and possibly their reaction products with the gastrointestinal contents." "[after gavage dosing of rats] it was not clear from these reports whether the parent chlorine dioxide itself or the chlorite, chlorate, or chloride ion degradation products were absorbed"
·cfpub.epa.gov·
{IRIS docs: Core 2000 doc} Toxicological Review of Chlorine Dioxide and Chlorite, In Support of Summary Information on the Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) ~IRIS, EPA
Benefits and Risks of the Use of Chlorine-containing Disinfectants in Food Production and Food Processing ~Joint FAO/WHO Expert Meeting
Benefits and Risks of the Use of Chlorine-containing Disinfectants in Food Production and Food Processing ~Joint FAO/WHO Expert Meeting
2008 May ******* {in-depth info on concentrations, safety, efficacy & time for CD and other disinfectants} "The use of chlorine dioxide at 20 mg/l resulted in little or no difference in numbers of total aerobic bacteria on beef compared with using potable water. " "The reaction of the bromide ion (Br−) with chlorine dioxide is thermodynamically unfavourable. However, with intense sunlight and high concen-trations of chlorine dioxide, chlorine dioxide does oxidize the bromide ion to hypobromite (BrO−) and bromate (BrO3−)"
·apps.who.int·
Benefits and Risks of the Use of Chlorine-containing Disinfectants in Food Production and Food Processing ~Joint FAO/WHO Expert Meeting
{ToxProf docs: Statement} Chlorine Dioxide and Chlorite: Potential for Human Exposure ~ATSDR, CDC
{ToxProf docs: Statement} Chlorine Dioxide and Chlorite: Potential for Human Exposure ~ATSDR, CDC
~2003. "Chlorine dioxide and chlorite (ions and salts) are strong oxidizers and react quickly in water or moist body tissues to form chloride ions. Consequently, chlorine dioxide and chlorite (ions and salts) are not detected in human tissues (e.g., blood, urine, fat, or breast milk). [Have some studies shown contradiction??]" " In water, chlorine dioxide is a strong oxidizer; **50–70%** of the chlorine dioxide that reacts with organic and inorganic compounds will immediately appear as chlorite (ClO2-) and chloride (Cl-) ions...chlorine dioxide does result in the formation of other DBPs (e.g., lower chlorinated organics, chlorate, and chlorite) which may be found in drinking water... ***Chlorine dioxide will decompose upon exposure to sunlight. The gas-phase absorption spectrum for chlorine dioxide is the same as in aqueous solution. The primary photochemical reaction of ClO2 in the gas phase corresponds to homolytic scission of one of the chlorine-oxygen bonds (i.e., ClO26ClO + O). Products of this initial reaction generate secondary products including doublet-state oxygen (O2*), chlorine (Cl2), and chlorine trioxide (Cl2O3) . If chlorine dioxide gas is diluted in air to below 15 volume percent, it can be relatively stable in darkness." "Chlorine dioxide alone will not hydrolyze in solution to any appreciable extent between pH 2 and 10. .." "Chlorite ions (ClO2-) are also effective oxidizing agents, although they react much slower than chlorine dioxide""Chlorine substitution in the products, however, is not entirely absent" "Under sunlight, some photolysis intermediates with long half-lives are capable of oxidizing bromide to from bromate."
·atsdr.cdc.gov·
{ToxProf docs: Statement} Chlorine Dioxide and Chlorite: Potential for Human Exposure ~ATSDR, CDC
{IRIS docs} Chlorine dioxide; CASRN 10049-04-4, Chemical Assessment Summary ~IRIS, EPA
{IRIS docs} Chlorine dioxide; CASRN 10049-04-4, Chemical Assessment Summary ~IRIS, EPA
********!!!!!!********** {Safe levels. 2000 is most recent date noted.} "...chlorine dioxide rapidly disappeared from the stored water (within 2-4 hours) and water chlorite concentrations concomitantly increased. Once absorbed, chlorine dioxide and chlorite are cleared from the blood at similar rates and are similarly distributed throughout the body .. Additionally, chloride is the major in vivo degradation product for chlorine dioxide, chlorite, and chlorate. The available data suggest that chlorine dioxide and chlorite have similar targets of toxicity and potencies. Therefore, the toxicity information for chlorite is relevant to deriving an RfD for chlorine dioxide." Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS)
·cfpub.epa.gov·
{IRIS docs} Chlorine dioxide; CASRN 10049-04-4, Chemical Assessment Summary ~IRIS, EPA
WHO~ Concise International Chemical Assessment Document 37: Chlorine Dioxide (Gas) ~WHO
WHO~ Concise International Chemical Assessment Document 37: Chlorine Dioxide (Gas) ~WHO
***!!!!**** 2002 " Some studies have been conducted via the oral route using aqueous solutions of chlorine dioxide. Several of these studies were conducted using “stabilized aqueous chlorine dioxide,” sometimes by maintaining a constant pH using sodium carbonate and sodium hydrogen carbonate. However, it is recognized that this would effectively lead to the formation of aqueous sodium chlorite (which can subsequently generate chlorine dioxide by acid dis-placement). These studies are felt to be less relevant than those using stabilized aqueous chlorine dioxide and are not summarized in this review. The reasons for this are that chlorine dioxide dissolves discretely in water (i.e., it does not dissociate into ions), forming a solution of around pH 5 or less, whereas an aqueous solution of sodium chlorite has a different, ionized composition and a pH of approximately 8. The explosive nature of this substance has limited the concentration of chlorine dioxide in aqueous solutions to a maximum of about 1% w/v" {******pg 4 -- ppm conversion info for air concentrations:} "0.1 ppm (0.28 mg/m3) 8-h time-weighted average (TWA) and 0.3 ppm (0.84 mg/m3) 15-min reference period" "It is predicted thatdermal exposure from contact with the aqueous solution in occupational settings will range from 0.1 to 5 mg/cm2 per day" "There are no quantitative human data, but chlorine dioxide is very toxic by single inhalation exposure in rats. There were no mortalities following exposure to 16 ppm (45 mg/m3) for 4 h, although pulmonary oedema and emphysema were seen in all animals exposed to 16–46 ppm (45–129 mg/m3) chlorine dioxide,the incidence increasing in a dose-related manner. The calculated mean LC50 was 32 ppm (90 mg/m3). In another study, ocular discharge, nosebleeds, pulmonary oedema, and death occurred at 260 ppm (728 mg/m3) for 2 h. Chlorine dioxide is toxic when administered in solution by a single oral dose to rats; at 40 and 80 mg/kg bodyweight, there were signs of corrosive activity in the stomach and gastrointestinal tract. The calculated oral LD50 was 94 mg/kg body weight."
·www.who.int·
WHO~ Concise International Chemical Assessment Document 37: Chlorine Dioxide (Gas) ~WHO
WHO~ Chlorine Dioxide, Chlorite and Chlorate in Drinking Water--Background document for development of WHO Guidelines for Drinking Water Quality ~WHO
WHO~ Chlorine Dioxide, Chlorite and Chlorate in Drinking Water--Background document for development of WHO Guidelines for Drinking Water Quality ~WHO
**** 2017 Jan. "Any chlorine dioxide remaining at the consumer’s tap will be reduced to chlorite and chloride upon ingestion. *** Consequently, a guideline value for chlorine dioxide has not been established."..."For chlorite, JECFA established an ADIof 0–0.03mg/kg bw on the basis of the NOAEL of 3mg/kg bw per day...Using the upper bound of the chlorite ADI of 30 μg/kg bw, a typical human body weight of 60 kg, the assumption that drinking-water contributes80% of the total exposure and a typical consumption of 2 L of water per day, the provisional guideline value is calculated to be 0.7mg/L (rounded figure). This guideline value is designated as provisional because use of chlorine dioxide as a disinfectantmay result in the chlorite guideline value being exceeded, " "JECFA therefore established an ADIof 0–0.01 mg/kg bw for chlorate" "[Page 1] Conversion factor in air: 1 part per million (ppm) = 2.8 mg/m3"
·www.who.int·
WHO~ Chlorine Dioxide, Chlorite and Chlorate in Drinking Water--Background document for development of WHO Guidelines for Drinking Water Quality ~WHO