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                                    United State*      EPA 749-F 94 003
                                    Environmentil Protection December 1994
                                    Agency


                                    Office of Pollution Prevention and Tones (7401)


                             dER^ Chemicals in the


                                    Environment
                                    ACETALDEHYDE
                                    (CAS NO. 75-07-0)

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Chemicals can be released to the envi-
ronment as a result of their manufacture,
processing, and use. The EPA has de-
veloped information summaries on se-
lected chemicals to describe how you
might be  exposed to these chemicals,
how exposure to them might afreet you
and die environment, what  happens to
them in the environment, who  regulates
them, and whom to contact for additional
information.  EPA is committed to re-
ducing  environmental   releases   of
chemicals through source reduction and
other practices that reduce  creation of
pollutants.

WHAT IS ACETALDEHYDE, HOW
 IS IT USED, AND HOW MIGHT I
          BE EXPOSED?

       Acetaldehyde  is  a colorless,
flammable liquid.  It occurs naturally in
certain  foods,  such as  ripe fruits and
coffee,  and in  cigarette  smoke.  Green
plants  produce acetaldehyde  as they
break down food,  tt is produced in large
amounts (740 million pounds in  1989) by
two companies in the United States. US
production of acetaldehyde may decline
in the near future as Mexico increases its
production of the chemical. US demand
for acetaldehyde increased slightly from
1987 to 1989, but is likely to remain
steady at its current level.  The largest
users of acetaldehyde are companies that
make acetic acid and related chemicals.
Companies also  use  acetaldehyde  to
make other chemicals such as pyridine,
pentaerythritol, and peracetic acid.
       Exposure to acetaldehyde can occur
in the workplace or in the environment fol-
lowing  releases to  air,  water,  land,  or
groundwater.  Exposure can also occur when
people eat fruit,  drink  coffee,  or smoke
cigarettes.  Acetaldehyde enters the body
when breamed in with contaminated air or
when consumed with contaminated food or
water, ft does not remain in the body due to
its breakdown, mainly to a chemical that is
normally present in the human body.
WHAT HAPPENS TO ACETALDEHYDE
       IN THE ENVIRONMENT?

       Acetaldehyde evaporates when  ex-
posed to air.  tt dissolves completely when
mixed with water.  Most direct releases of
acetaldehyde to the environment are to air or
to underground sites, ft also evaporates from
water and soil exposed to air.  Once in air, it
breaks down to other chemicals.  Microor-
ganisms that live in water and in soil can also
break down acetaldehyde.  Because it is a
liquid mat does not bind well to soil, acet-
aldehyde that makes its way into the ground
can  move  through the  ground  and entei
groundwater.   Plants and animals are  not
likely to store acetaldehyde.
 HOW DOES ACETALDEHYDE AFFECT
      HUMAN HEALTH AND THE
           ENVIRONMENT?

       Effects of acetaldehyde on  humar
health and the environment depend r:,, how
much acetaldehyde is present and the lengtt
and fh quency of exposure.   Effects
al;io depend on the health of a person
or the  condition  of the environment
w len (xposure occurs.

       Breathing acetaldehyde  for
short f eriods of time can irritate the
human respiratory system. Acetalde-
hj-de tan  also adversely  affect  the
codiovasoilar system. Contact with
a< etalc ehyde liquid or vapor irritates
the skii and the eyes.  These effects
are not likely to occur at levels of
acetalc ehyde that are normally found
in the itnvironment.

       Human health effects asso-
ciated  with breathing or otherwise
consul itng small amounts of acetal-
dshydn over long periods of time are
not krown.  Limited evidence from
a lima  studies shows that  acetalde-
hyde (an adversely affect the devel-
oping fetus.  Laboratory studies also
si tow  hat acetaldehyde can severely
d unaf e th® respiratory tract and cause
cancel  in animals exposed repeatedly
by inhalation.   Repeat exposure to
acetaldehyde  in  air  may  likewise
ciuse cancer in humans.

       Acetaldshyde by itself is  not
likely to cause environmental harm at
levels normally found in the envi-
rannunt   Acetaldehyde  can con-
tibutn  to the formation of photo-
chemical smog when it reacts with
ether  volatile  organic carbon sub-
stance s in air.

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