Technical Factsheet on: STYRENE
List of Contaminants
As part of the Drinking Water and Health pages, this fact sheet is part of a larger publication:
National Primary Drinking Water Regulations
Drinking Water Standards
MCLG: 0.1 mg/L
MCL: 0.1 mg/L
HAL(child): 1 day: 20 mg/L; Longer-term: 2 mg/L
Health Effects Summary
Acute: EPA has found styrene to potentially cause the following health effects from acute exposures at
levels above the MCL: nervous system effects such as depression, loss of concentration, weakness,
fatigue and nausea.
Drinking water levels which are considered "safe" for short-term exposures: For a 22 lb. child consuming
1 liter of water per day: a one-day exposure to 20 mg/L; upto a 7-year exposure to 2 mg/L.
Chronic: Styrene has the potential to cause the following health effects from long-term exposures at
levels above the MCL: liver and nerve tissue damage.
Cancer: There is some evidence that styrene may have the potential to cause cancer from a lifetime
exposure at levels above the MCL.
Usage Patterns
Production of styrene has increased: from 8.5 billion lbs. in 1988 to 10.7 billion lbs in 1993. In 1989, it was
estimated that industries consumed styrene as follows: Polystyrene, 55%; acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene
(ABS), 10%; styrene-butadiene rubber (SBR), 5%; styrene-butadiene latex, 5%; unsaturated polyester
resins, 5%; miscellaneous uses, including other copolymers, 7%; exports, 13%.
Initially, styrene was used primarily in the synthetic rubber industry, but most styrene is currently
consumed in plastics, resins, coatings, and paints. To date, all commercial uses are based on chemical
reactions that polymerize or copolymerize styrene.
Release Patterns
Styrene is released into the environment by emissions and effluents from its production and its use in
polymer manufacture. It has been found in exhausts from spark-ignition engines, oxy-acetylene flames,
cigarette smoke and gases emitted by pyrolysis of brake linings. Stack emissions from waste incineration
have been found to contain styrene. Styrene is emitted in automobile exhaust. Consumers may be
exposed to potentially high levels of styrene monomer through contact with unsaturated polyester resin
products used in fiberglass boat construction and repair, and as auto body fillers and casting plastics.
These products may contain styrene at concentrations of 30 to 50%. Its presence in various food
products is due to monomer leaching from polystyrene containers.
From 1987 to 1993, according to EPA's Toxic Chemical Release Inventory, styrene releases to land and
water totalled over 2 million lbs., of which about 85 percent was to land. These releases were primarily

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from adhesives and sealants industries. The largest releases occurred in Texas. The largest direct
releases to water occurred in Louisiana.
Environmental Fate
If released to the atmosphere, styrene will react rapidly with both hydroxyl radicals and ozone with a
combined, calculated half-life of about 2.5 hours. If released to environmental bodies of water, styrene will
volatilize relatively rapidly and may be subject to biodegradation. Five day aqueous theoretical BOD
(TBOD) of 80% in acclimated sewage seed and 42% TBOD in an unacclimated seed have been
observed. Styrene is not expected to hydrolyze.
If released to soil it will biodegrade, with reports of 95% degradation from a landfill soil and 87%
degradation from a sandy loam soil in 16 weeks. It is expected to leach with a low-to-moderate soil
mobility, based upon a Koc of 520 to 555 estimated using regression-derived equations or structure
estimation methods.
Styrene is not expected to bioaccumulate or bioconcentrate in organisms and food chains to any
measurable extent. A BCF of 13.5 was experimentally determined in a bioconcentration study using
goldfish. Based upon its measured water solubility and log Kow, the BCF of styrene can be estimated to
be approximately 24 and 100, respectively, from regression-derived equations.
While styrene has been detected in various drinking waters, it was not detected in a groundwater supply
survey of 945 finished water supplies which use groundwater sources. Styrene has been detected in
various chemical, textile, latex, oil refinery and industrial wastewater effluents. Styrene has been
frequently detected in the ambient air of source dominated locations and urban areas, has been detected
in the air of a national forest in Alabama, and has been detected in the vicinity of oil fires. Food packaged
in polystyrene containers has been found to contain small amounts of styrene.
Chemical/Physical Properties
CAS Number: 100-42-5
Color/ Form/Odor: Colorless or yellowish oily liquid with aromatic, almost floral odor; available as polymer
grade.
M.P.: -30.63 C B.P.: 145.2 C
Vapor Pressure: 4.5 mm Hg at 25 C; highly volatile
Octanol/Water Partition (Kow): Log Kow = 2.95
Density/Spec. Grav.: 0.906 at 20 C
Solubility: 310 mg/L at 25 C; Slightly soluble in water
Soil sorption coefficient: Koc estimated at 520 to 555; low mobility in soil
Odor/Taste Thresholds: Taste threshold in water is 0.73 mg/L
Bioconcentration Factor: BCF = 13.5 in fish; not expected to bioconcentrate in aquatic organisms.
Henry's Law Coefficient: 0.00275 atm-cu m/mole at 25 C; rapid evaporation from water.

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Trade Names/Synonyms: Vinyl benzene, Phenethylene, Cinnamene, DiarexHF 77, Styrolene, Styron,
Styropol,
Other Regulatory Information
Monitoring:
- For Ground/Surface Water Sources:
Initial Frequency- 4 quarterly samples every 3 years
Repeat Frequency- Annually after 1 year of no detection
- Triggers - Return to Initial Freq. if detect at > 0.0005 mg/L
Analysis
Reference Source	Method Numbers
EPA 600/4-88-039	502.2; 524.2
Treatment/Best Available Technologies: Granular Activated Charcoal and Packed Tower Aeration
Toxic Release Inventory - Releases to Water and Land, 1987 to 1993 (in pounds):

Water

TOTALS (in pounds)
275,888

Top Ten States*


TX
160,411
572,294
WV
1,600
555,360
IN
0
124,794
Wl
0
102,973
OH
0
90,358
GA
0
79,000
LA
53,430
0
FL
0
38,800
NY
32
33,192
KY
0
18,000
Land
1,796,451
Major Industries*
Adhesives, sealants	0	537,360
Concrete products	0	398,424
Synthetic rubber	152,215	149,147
Misc. plastic products	515	201,713
Plastics and resins	25,133	71,363
Boatbuilding, repair	220	83,256
Car parts, access.	0	79,250
Misc. Indust. organics	34,275	43,290
Travel trailers, campers	0	45,129
Custom plastic resins	720	44,320
* Water/Land totals only include facilities with releases greater than a certain amount - usually 1000 to
10,000 lbs.
For Additional Information
EPA can provide further regulatory or other general information:
EPA Safe Drinking Water Hotline - 800/426-4791

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Other sources of toxicological and environmental fate data include:
Toxic Substance Control Act Information Line - 202/554-1404
Toxics Release Inventory, National Library of Medicine - 301/496-6531
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry - 404/639-6000

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