DIMETHYL CARBONATE - Kowa Company. Ltd.

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Transcript DIMETHYL CARBONATE - Kowa Company. Ltd.

DIMETHYL CARBONATE
(DMC)
The Newest VOC Exempt
Solvent
Kowa American Corp
October 2010
Previous VOC Exempt Coating
Solvents
• Realistically there were only a handful of VOC
exempt solvents that are not HAPS (or ODS)
and under $ 2.00/lb that formulators can use for
coating, cleaning & adhesive solvents:
• Acetone
• Methyl acetate (MeAc)
• tert-Butyl Acetate (tBAc)
• p-Chlorobenzotrifluoride (PCBTF)
Dimethyl Carbonate (DMC)
• VOC exemption petition filed July 2004 by
Kowa American Corp.
• DMC has perhaps lowest MIR value of any
liquid chemical in commercial use based on
studies conducted by Dr. William Carter
(study funded by Exxon Mobil Chemical)
• Ultra-low MIR is allowing for fast
approvals by the various states due to its
very favorable ozone reduction potential
DMC & PC recently exempted
by the EPA
• Dimethyl Carbonate (DMC) & Propylene
Carbonate exempted by EPA on Jan 13, 2009
• Each state must also exempt DMC & PC for
stationary source VOC rules.
• Almost all states beside California will have
exempted DMC by the end of 2010 (40 states
have now exempted DMC (Oct. 2010).
• California must have each of their Air Districts
separately exempt DMC for coatings, Inks and
adhesives, which is proceeding forward.
DMC for Architectural, Aerosol
& Automotive Refinish Coatings
• DMC is VOC exempt in all states today
except CA, NY (until 12/31/2010) & MA for:
Architectural Coatings (subpart D),
Automotive Refinish Coatings (Subpart B)
and Consumer Items (subpart C) based on
Federal VOC rules (40 CFR part 59)
• DMC (with its ultra low MIR value) can be
used in aerosol coatings in Calif. (soon to be
approved for all of USA for aerosol coatings).
DMC VOC Exempt States
Washington
Dec 2010
West of Cascades
already exempt
Montana
Oregon
May 2010
Vermont
New Hampshire
Wisconsin
August 2010
South Dakota
June 2010
Nebraska
June 2010
Utah
March 2010
California
Each AMD
must exempt
New
Mexico
Kansas
Sept. 2010
Oklahoma
July 2010
Indiana
Missouri
Dec. 2010
Texas
April 1, 2010
Massachusetts Feb. 2011?
Rhode Island Sept. 2010
Connecticut
Pennsylvania
Iowa
New Jersey
Ohio
West
Virginia
Virginia
Delaware
Maryland
Kentucky
Tennessee
August 2010
Arkansas
Jan. 2011
Alabama
March
2010
Alaska
Dec. 2010
New York
Dec 2010
Michigan
Jan. 2010?
Illinois
Colorado
Arizona
Feb. 2011?
Maine
Minnesota
Idaho
March 2010
Wyoming
Oct. 2010
Nevada
North Dakota
North Carolina
South Carolina
Jan. 2011
Georgia
Louisiana
Florida
Hawaii
Green states
are VOC
Exempt
DMC Exemption Status in Calif.
• San Diego, Santa Barbara, Monterey Bay,
Mohave, Butte ,Ventura, Colusa & Feather
River AMD’s have exempted DMC as a VOC
• Most “county” AMD’s plan to exempt or
have no VOC rules (functionally exempt)
• San Joaquin Valley Air MD expected to
exempt in Jan. 2011 (user permit required?)
• Shasta, Glenn & Tehema AMD’s may already
exempt DMC depending on application
• Santa Barbara users must file for a permit
DMC Exemption Status in Calif.
• Bay Area AQMD looking at when they can
begin rule making, contact Dan Belick, 415749-4786, [email protected], for info
• SCAQMD has deferred rule making due to
some local opposition, contact Naveen
Berry, 909-396-2363, [email protected]
• SCAQMD may need to look at certain
coatings applications such as car refinishing
and in plant coatings to exempt first.
Del
Norte
Siskiyou
Modoc
Green = DMC VOC Exempt
Shasta
Trinity
Lassen
Orange = No VOC rules, DMC
functionally exempt
Light Blue = In rulemaking
Tehama
Plumas
Butte
Glenn
Sierra
Nevada
Colusa
Lake
El Dorado
Yolo
Alpine
Napa
Amador
Sonoma
Solano
Marin
San
Contra Joaquin
Tuolumne
Costa
San Francisco
Tan = no formal rulemaking
started yet
Mono
Alameda
San
Mateo
Santa
Santa
Clara
Merced
Cruz
San
Benito
Fresno
Inyo
Tulare
Monterey
Kings
San Luis
Obispo
Kern
San Bernardino
Santa
Barbara
Los
Ventura Angeles
Orange
Riverside
San Diego
Imperial
California CARB Consumer items
• CARB regulates “consumer product” applications
(coatings are covered by each AQMD separately)
• Paint thinners is in their “multi-purpose solvent”
classification (some local Calif. AMD’s debate
that CARB can regulate paint thinners over them)
• CARB needs typical formulations for non-coating
consumer applications using DMC, including the
solvent the DMC will replace for CARB to do a
health hazard assessment. CARB Contact: Carla
Takemoto 916-324-8028, [email protected]
MIR Reactivity Values (2009)
MIR gram basis MIR mole basis
DMC
0.055
4.95
Ethane
0.26
7.8
Acetone
0.35
20.3
Methyl Acetate
0.067
5.2
Prop Carbonate
0.27
27.56
Benzotrifluoride
0.28
40.91
DMC General Properties
• DMC is a colorless, fast evaporating solvent
• Has substantial polar nature, and moderate hbonding strength effective in replacing esters,
glycol ethers and ketones in formulations
• Has low toxicity, an unobjectionable
methanol type odor and low skin irritation
• Freezes at 2 – 4 ºC (36 –38 ºF)
• Flammable Liquid, Flash point 17 ºC (63 ºF)
DMC Structure
O
C H3
O
C
O
C H3
DMC Evaporation Rate
Fast to moderate evaporation rate (3.22 –
3.4, BuAC = 1.0), similar to tBAC (2.8),
toluene (2.0) and isopropyl acetate (3.0)
Can be used to as slightly slower
evaporating replacement for MEK (3.8),
Ethyl Acetate (4.1- 4.2), or as faster
evaporating replacement for IPA (1.7),
MPK (2.3), Ethanol (1.8) and MIBK (1.6)
DMC - Flammability
• DMC has a flashpoint of 63ºF (17ºC)
• Flammability will limit use in consumer
coatings, cleaning or indoor applications
• Flammability risk still much lower than
acetone (-4º F), ethyl acetate (26ºF) or MEK
(26ºF), which DMC can readily replace
• Partially water soluble (up to 13 % in
water), which allows water to be more
effective in fighting DMC based fires.
Flashpoint, E. rate, Boiling point
Evaporation Flashpoint
Rate
ºF
BuAc =1.0
Boiling
point ºC
DMC
3.22
63
90
PCBTF
.9
109*
139
Acetone
5.6
-4
56.5
<.005
269.6
240
Prop Carb
tBAc
2.8
40
98
BTF
2.8
54
102
DMC Solubility Properties
• Hildebrand solubility parameter 20.3 Mpa
• Hansen solubility parameters: Dispersion
15.5 polar 3.9 h-bond 9.7 molar vol. 84.2
• Similar solubility parameters to some
common glycol ethers: cellosolve acetate,
ethylene glycol butyl ether acetate,
propylene glycol monobutyl ether and
propylene glycol monoethyl ether acetate
DMC Solubility Properties
DMC has been described as useful in acrylics,
urethanes, epoxies and alkyd systems.
DMC is miscible with almost all organic
solvents
DMC would easily replace oxygenated
solvents like esters, ketones & glycol ethers
DMC can replace alcohols, aromatics and
aliphatics with appropriate co-solvents
and/or reformulation work
DMC in Waterborne Systems
• DMC being an ester, can hydrolyze in
acidic and basic conditions to methanol and
carbon dioxide.
• DMC may be stable in neutral conditions
with suitable buffers, although formulators
need proper care to prevent CO2 build up
• DMC’s primary usage area should be in all
solvent borne systems, where residual water
does not normally cause hydrolysis issues
DMC Expected Uses
• DMC has shown its most promise in Auto
refinish, with its favorable solubility, odor,
evaporation rate and economic profiles
• Industrial coatings for coating parts and
architectural components at factories have
shown similar appeal.
• Also used in traffic paints, steel drum
linings, floor coatings, concrete sealers
• Can also be an effective paint thinner &
multipurpose solvent, as is or as co-solvent
DMC’s Odor Profile
• One of DMC’s most favorable properties is
a mild and non-offensive odor.
• PCBTF and Tert-Butyl Acetate odors are
much more pronounced and pungent
• Noxious solvent odors are perhaps the most
important concern of neighbors to body
shops, factories, print shops and other
industrial settings
• Mild odor is well received by workers
handling DMC or used in their work areas
DMC Cost & Supply
• DMC pricing is below $ 1.00/lb, making it
price competitive with most oxygenated
solvents except possibly acetone. Large
users can expect pricing below $ .80/lb.
• Drums and bulk isotanks readily available
from multiple factories in China. DMC is
used in very large volumes in China for
coatings primarily because of its low cost.
• Totes can be filled from isotanks.
• Long term a bulk tank in USA is possible
DMC – Toxicity
• DMC (like all methyl esters) rapidly deesterifies in the body to methanol & CO2
• DMC has low acute oral toxicity (LD50 rat
12,900 mg/Kg, LD50 mouse 6,000 mg/Kg)
• DMC was found to be negative in mutagenic
tests (in vitro Ames & comet assay)
• Readily biodegradable and has low potential to
bio-accumulate or be persistent in environment
• Not expected to be toxic to fish or bacteria
(possibly toxic to algae)
DMC & Methanol toxicities
• EPA feels teratogenicity is major endpoint
health concern of environmental exposure for
Methanol (and therefore DMC)
• DMC is not mutagenic or genotoxic
• Well run study by Exxon/Mobil on DMC’s
teratogenic potential confirms it is virtually
identical to Methanol’s (NOEL 1,000 ppm)
• Kowa recommends an 8 hour industrial PEL of
100 ppm based on DMC’s toxicity profile
California OEHHA Assessment
• California's Office of Environmental Health
Hazard Assessment issued a toxicity
assessment of DMC in Dec.2009 that used
the toxicity of its primary metabolite
methanol and existing DMC studies to issue
a toxicological assessment of DMC
• Reported there were no concerns that DMC
like methanol would be carcinogenic
Calif. OEHHA Conclusion
• OEHHA report concluded that doses levels
of DMC likely to be achieved by
environmental exposures to the general
public by inhalation appears to have
“relatively minor” environmental health
concerns
• Established interim REL consistent with
Methanol it’s primary metabolite
DMC Azeotropes & Co-solvents
• There have been a few cryptic references in
literature to DMC forming azeotropes with
numerous solvents without further data
• Azeotropes using DMC could be the “wild
card” in developing coating or cleaning
formulations, substantially changing the
evaporation rate, solubility and perhaps
flammability profiles (to over 100 °F ?)
• Using DMC & PC together might replace
PCBTF, Xylene, butyl acetate, aromatic 100
Propylene Carbonate
• Propylene Carbonate is a very slow
evaporating solvent (evaporation rate <.005,
BuAc =1). This will restrict its solvent use.
• Low viscosity 2.4 cps, high flashpoint 253º F
• Practically non-toxic by oral, dermal or
Inhalation, slight skin irritant, eye irritant
• Available from Kowa from same Chinese
source as our Dimethyl Carbonate.
Propylene Carbonate
• Propylene Carbonate’s very low toxicity
profile allows it’s use in cosmetic products,
therefore PC safe for all consumer items
• Readily biodegradable
• Useful as a co solvent, wetting agent or
tailing solvent (last solvent to evaporate).
• Literature suggest can be used in binary &
tertiary solvent systems to replace common
solvents like trichlorethane and toluene
BENZOTRIFLUORIDE - BTF
• Proposed VOC exempt solvent, EPA
recently tabled petition due to recently
revised MIR values in 2009
• Low MIR of 0.28 (2009) should shortly be
allowed for aerosol coatings on federal
level, now allowed in Aerosol coatings in
Calif. with a MIR value of .26 (2004 table)
• Almost a direct replacement for toluene,
similar solvency and evaporation rate (2.8)