MSDS
12531
page 3 of 5
This coating may contain materials classified as nuisance particulates (listed "as Dust" in Section 2) which may be present at hazardous
levels only during sanding or abrading of the dried film. If no specific dusts are listed in Section 2, the applicable limits for nuisance dusts
are ACGIH TLV 10 mg/m3 (total dust), 3 mg/m3 (respirable fraction), OSHA PEL 15 mg/m3 (total dust), 5 mg/m3 (respirable fraction).
VENTILATION
Local exhaust preferable. General exhaust acceptable if the exposure to materials in Section 2 is maintained below applicable exposure
limits. Refer to OSHA Standards 1910.94, 1910.107, 1910.108.
RESPIRATORY PROTECTION
If personal exposure cannot be controlled below applicable limits by ventilation, wear a properly fitted organic vapor/particulate respirator
approved by NIOSH/MSHA for protection against materials in Section 2.
When sanding or abrading the dried film, wear a dust/mist respirator approved by NIOSH/MSHA for dust which may be generated from this
product, underlying paint, or the abrasive.
PROTECTIVE GLOVES
None required for normal application of aerosol products where minimal skin contact is expected. For long or repeated contact, wear
chemical resistant gloves.
EYE PROTECTION
Wear safety spectacles with unperforated sideshields.
OTHER PRECAUTIONS
Intentional misuse by deliberately concentrating and inhaling the contents can be harmful or fatal.
SECTION 9 — PHYSICAL AND CHEMICAL PROPERTIES
PRODUCT WEIGHT
5.99 lb/gal 717 g/l
SPECIFIC GRAVITY
0.72
BOILING POINT
<0 - 416 °F <-18 - 213 °C
MELTING POINT
Not Available
VOLATILE VOLUME
85%
EVAPORATION RATE
Faster than
ether
VAPOR DENSITY
Heavier than air
SOLUBILITY IN WATER
Not Available
VOLATILE ORGANIC COMPOUNDS (VOC Theoretical - As Packaged)
Volatile Weight 79.82% Less Water and Federally Exempt Solvents
SECTION 10 — STABILITY AND REACTIVITY
STABILITY — Stable
CONDITIONS TO AVOID
None known.
INCOMPATIBILITY
None known.
HAZARDOUS DECOMPOSITION PRODUCTS
By fire: Carbon Dioxide, Carbon Monoxide
HAZARDOUS POLYMERIZATION
Will not occur
SECTION 11 — TOXICOLOGICAL INFORMATION
CHRONIC HEALTH HAZARDS
Reports have associated repeated and prolonged overexposure to solvents with permanent brain and nervous system damage.
Ethylbenzene is classified by IARC as possibly carcinogenic to humans (2B) based on inadequate evidence in humans and sufficient
evidence in laboratory animals. Lifetime inhalation exposure of rats and mice to high ethylbenzene concentrations resulted in increases in
certain types of cancer, including kidney tumors in rats and lung and liver tumors in mice. These effects were not observed in animals
exposed to lower concentrations. There is no evidence that ethylbenzene causes cancer in humans.





