
RightAnswer Knowledge Solutions provides access to hundreds of data sources. Our premier and proprietary sources include fully-researched documents from well-established experts in the chemical and HazMat fields.
A search in our system for this chemical would return results – all in one place -- in the following categories from the listed data sources.
- Chemical Identification
- Environmental Hazards
- First Aid/Medical Treatment
- Handling/Storage/Shipping/Waste Management
- Personal Protection
- Physical Hazards/Corrective Response Actions
| - Physical/Chemical Properties
- Regulatory/Standards/Labels
- Report Abstracts and Studies
- Reproductive Risk
- Toxicology/Health Hazards/Exposure
| Example of Acute Exposure data from MEDITEXT. |
Other Government Links Searched via RegsKnowledge:
State Environmental Regulations

CFR Regulations

Example Content from MEDITEXT for 8052-42-4:
Please note: this is an extract of information from a larger document. Full document and details are available by subscription.
ACUTE EXPOSURE INFORMATION
- WITH POISONING/EXPOSURE
- The majority of hot tar burns involve only 3 to 5% of the body surfaces. Partial thickness burns are most common, but patchy areas of full thickness skin losses are commonly observed.
- Inhalation of hot asphalt fumes can produce eye and respiratory tract irritation, headache, nausea, and nervousness due to the formation of hydrogen sulfide gas.
- Serious hydrogen sulfide poisoning can occur from inhalation of hydrogen sulfide evolved from asphalt in closed tanks. Oral ingestion of cool asphalt is relatively non-toxic.
- Asphalt cooled in a closed tank can evolve high concentrations of hydrogen sulfide gas, carbon monoxide, propane, methane, and other aliphatic hydrocarbons, as well as producing a relatively hypoxic atmosphere.
© 2011-2025 RightAnswer.com, Inc. and/or its licensors. All rights reserved. No claim to original U.S. Govt. works.