MSDS

Sheet
Steel
Page 5 of 8
Revision
Date: 05/05/2015
Melting Point- Approximately 2800
'F
pH - Not applicable
Specific Gravity (at 15.6°C) -Not applicable
Density (at 15.6 °C) - Not applicable
Vapor Pressure- Not applicable
Vapor Density (air=
1)-
Not applicable
%Volatile, by Volume- Not applicable
Solubility in Water- Insoluble.
Evaporation Rate (Butyl Acetate = 1) - Not applicable
Other Physical and Chemical Data
None
10. STABILITY AND REACTIVITY
Stability - Stable
Conditions to Avoid- Steel at temperatures above the melting point may liberate fumes containing oxides
of iron and alloying elements. Avoid generation of airborne fume.
Hazardous Polymerization - Will not occur.
Incompatibility (Materials to Avoid)- Reacts with strong acids to form hydrogen gas. Do not store near
strong oxidizers.
Hazardous Decomposition Products -Metallic fumes may be produced during welding, burning, grinding,
and possibly machining or any situation with the potential for thermal decomposition. Refer to ANSI Z49.1
11. TOXICOLOGICAL INFORMATION
The primary component of this product is iron. Long-term exposure to iron dusts or fumes can result in a
condition called siderosis which is considered to be a benign pneumoconiosis. Symptoms may include
chronic bronchitis, emphysema, and shortness of breath upon exertion. Penetration of iron particles in the
skin or eye may cause an exogenous or ocular siderosis which may be characterized by a red-brown
pigmentation of the affected area. Ingestion overexposures to iron may affect the gastrointestinal, nervous,
and hematopoietic system and the liver. Iron and steel founding, but not iron or iron oxide, has been listed
as potentially carcinogenic by IARC.
When this product is welded, fumes are generated. Welding fumes may be different in composition from the
original welding product, with the chief component being ordinary oxides of the metal being welded. Chronic
health effects (including cancer) have been associated with the fumes and dusts of individual component
metals (see above), and welding fumes as a general category have been listed by IARC as a carcinogen
(Group 2B). There is also limited evidence that welding fumes may cause adverse reproductive and
fetal
effects. Evidence is stronger where welding materials contain known reproductive toxins, e.g., lead which
may be present in the coating material of this product.
Breathing fumes or dusts of this product may result in metal fume fever, which is an illness produced
by
inhaling metal oxides. These oxides are produced by heating various metals including cadmium, zinc,
magnesium, copper, antimony, nickel, cobalt, manganese, tin, lead, beryllium, silver, chromium, aluminum,
selenium, iron, and arsenic. The most common agents involved are zinc and copper.
This product may contain small amounts of manganese. Prolonged exposure to manganese dusts or
fumes is associated with "manganism", a Parkinson-like syndrome characterized by a variety of
neurological symptoms including muscle spasms, gait disturbances, tremors, and psychoses.
This product may contain small amounts of cadmium. Primary target organs for cadmium overexposure
are the lung and the kidney. Because of its cumulative nature, chronic cadmium poisoning can cause
serious disease which takes many years to develop and may continue to progress despite cessation of
exposure. Progression of the disease may not reflect current exposure conditions. It is also capable of
causing a painful osteomalacia called "ltai-ltai" in postmenopausal women, and has caused developmental
effects and/or reproductive effects in male and female animals. Cadmium is a listed carcinogen by NTP,
OSHA, and IARC (Group 1).