United States
                 Environmental Protection
                 Agency
Pollution Prevention
and Toxics
(7407)
February 1995
EPA749-F-95-015
&EPA      OPPT  Chemical  Fact  Sheets
                    Nitrobenzene (CAS  No.  98-95-3)
                 Chemicals can be released to the environment as a result of their
                 manufacture, processing, and use. EPA has developed information
                 summaries on selected chemicals to describe how you might be
                 exposed to these chemicals,  how exposure to them might affect you
                 and the environment, what happens to them in the environment, who
                 regulates them, and whom to contact for additional information. EPA is
                 committed to reducing environmental releases of chemicals through
                 source reduction and other practices that reduce creation of pollutants.
  WHAT IS NITROBENZENE, HOW IS IT USED, AND HOW MIGHT I BE EXPOSED?

      Nitrobenzene is an oily, flammable liquid. It smells like bitter almonds.  Nitrobenzene does not occur naturally.
  It is produced in very large amounts (1.4 billion pounds in 1991) in the United States by four companies. U.S. demand
  is expected to increase about 3% to 4% per year for the next several years. The largest users of nitrobenzene are
  companies that make aniline. Other companies use smaller amounts of nitrobenzene to make explosives, aniline dyes,
  pesticides, and drugs.  Companies also use nitrobenzene as a solvent in products like paint and shoe, floor, and metal
  polishes.

      Exposure can occur in the workplace during its manufacture, processing, and use, or in the environment following
  releases to air, water, land, and groundwater. Exposure can also occur when people use nitrobenzene-containing paints
  and polishes. Nitrobenzene enters the body when people breathe air or consume food or water contaminated with
  nitrobenzene. It can also be absorbed through skin contact.  It does not remain in the body due to its breakdown and
  removal.
  WHAT HAPPENS TO NITROBENZENE IN THE ENVIRONMENT?

      Nitrobenzene can evaporate when exposed to air. It dissolves when mixed with water. Most releases of
  nitrobenzene to the U.S. environment are to underground injection sites. In 1992, only a small percent (6%) of
  environmental releases of nitrobenzene was to air. It can also evaporate slowly from water and soil exposed to air.
  Once in air, nitrobenzene breaks down to other chemicals.  Microorganisms living in water and in soil also break down
  nitrobenzene. Because it is a liquid that does not bind well to soil, nitrobenzene that makes its way into the ground can
  move through the ground and enter groundwater. Nitrobenzene may be stored in plants, but is not expected to
  accumulate in fish.

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HOW DOES NITROBENZENE AFFECT HUMAN HEALTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT?

    Effects of nitrobenzene on human health and the environment depend on how much nitrobenzene is present and
the length and frequency of exposure.  Effects also depend on the health of a person or the condition of the
environment when exposure occurs.

    Workers exposed to large amounts of nitrobenzene in air have experienced headaches, muscle spasms, nausea,
convulsions, and coma. These effects occur because nitrobenzene decreases the capacity of blood to carry oxygen and
because it affects the human nervous system directly.  These effects are not likely to occur at levels of nitrobenzene
that are normally found in the U.S. environment.

    Adverse human health effects associated with breathing or otherwise consuming small amounts of nitrobenzene
over long periods of time are not known. Repeat exposure to nitrobenzene in air over a lifetime causes cancer in
animals.  Nitrobenzene may  likewise cause cancer in humans. Laboratory studies, exposing animals orally and by air,
have shown that nitrobenzene causes adverse reproductive system effects. Laboratory studies show that repeat
exposure to nitrobenzene in air adversely affects the blood, liver, kidneys, adrenal gland, and nervous system of
animals.

     Nitrobenzene is moderately toxic to aquatic life. Nitrobenzene is not likely to cause adverse environmental
effects at levels normally found in the U.S. environment.


WHAT EPA OFFICES OR OTHER FEDERAL AGENCIES OR OTHER GROUPS CAN I CONTACT FOR
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON  NITROBENZENE?

    EPA OFFICE                 STATUTE                           PHONE NUMBER

    Pollution  Prevention           Pollution Prevention Act (PPA)         (202) 260-1023
      & Toxics                    Emergency Planning and
                                  Community Right-to-Know Act
                                  (EPCRA)(§313/TRI)                 (800)535-0202
                                 Toxic Substances Control Act
                                  (TSCA) (§4, 8D)                     (202)554-1404
    Air                           Clean Air Act                        (919)541-0888
    Water                       Clean Water Act                      (202) 260-7588
    Solid Waste  &                 Resource Conservation and
    Emergency Response          Recovery Act (RCRA)                (800) 535-0202
                                 Comprehensive Environmental
                                  Response, Compensation, and
                                  Liability Act (CERCLA)                (800) 535-0202


    OTHER FEDERAL AGENCY/DEPARTMENT OR GROUP             PHONE NUMBER

    Agency of Toxic Substances & Disease Registry                       (404) 639-6000
    American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists             (513) 742-2020
    Consumer Product Safety Commission                               (301) 504-0994
    Food & Drug Administration                                         (301) 443-3170
    National Institute for Occupational Safety & Health                     (800) 356-4674
    Occupational Safety & Health Administration
           (Check local phone book for phone number under Department of Labor)


The Support Document for this and other OPPT Chemical Fact Sheets  can be found on the  Internet at:
    http://www.epa.gov/chemfact

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