Latest GHS Classification Results by the Japanese Government (edited by NITE)

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GENERAL INFORMATION
 
Item Information
CAS RN 64-18-6
Chemical Name Formic acid
Substance ID m-nite-64-18-6_v2
Download of Excel format Excel file

REFERENCE INFORMATION
Item Information
Guidance used for the classification (External link) To Guidance List
UN GHS document (External link) To UN GHS document
FAQ(GHS classification results by the Japanese Government) To FAQ
List of Information Sources (Excel file) List of Information Sources
List of Definitions/Abbreviations Definitions/Abbreviations
Sample Label by MHLW (External link) MHLW Website (in Japanese Only)
Sample SDS by MHLW (External link) MHLW Website (in Japanese Only)
OECD/eChemPortal (External link) To OECD/eChemPortal (External link)

PHYSICAL HAZARDS
Hazard class Classification Pictogram
Signal word
Hazard statement
(code)
Precautionary statement
(code)
Rationale for the classification Classification year (FY) GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government
1 Explosives Not classified (Not applicable)
-
-
- - There are no chemical groups associated with explosive properties present in the molecule. FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
2 Flammable gases Not classified (Not applicable)
-
-
- - Liquid (GHS definition) FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
3 Aerosols Not classified (Not applicable)
-
-
- - Not aerosol products. FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
4 Oxidizing gases Not classified (Not applicable)
-
-
- - Liquid (GHS definition) FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
5 Gases under pressure Not classified (Not applicable)
-
-
- - Liquid (GHS definition) FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
6 Flammable liquids Category 3


Warning
H226 P303+P361+P353
P370+P378
P403+P235
P210
P233
P240
P241
P242
P243
P280
P501
It was classified in Category 3 based on a flash point of 50 deg C (closed cup) (HSDB (Access on July 2014)).

FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
7 Flammable solids Not classified (Not applicable)
-
-
- - Liquid (GHS definition) FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
8 Self-reactive substances and mixtures Not classified (Not applicable)
-
-
- - There are no chemical groups present in the molecule associated with explosive or self-reactive properties. FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
9 Pyrophoric liquids Not classified
-
-
- - It is estimated that it does not ignite at normal temperatures from an autoignition temperature of 520 deg C (ICSC (1997)). FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
10 Pyrophoric solids Not classified (Not applicable)
-
-
- - Liquid (GHS definition) FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
11 Self-heating substances and mixtures Classification not possible
-
-
- - Test methods applicable to liquid substances are not available. FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
12 Substances and mixtures which, in contact with water, emit flammable gases Not classified (Not applicable)
-
-
- - The chemical structure of the substance does not contain metals or metalloids (B, Si, P, Ge, As, Se, Sn, Sb, Te, Bi, Po, At). FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
13 Oxidizing liquids Not classified (Not applicable)
-
-
- - The substance is an organic compound containing oxygen (but not fluorine or chlorine) which is chemically bonded only to carbon or hydrogen. FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
14 Oxidizing solids Not classified (Not applicable)
-
-
- - Liquid (GHS definition) FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
15 Organic peroxides Not classified (Not applicable)
-
-
- - Organic compounds containing no bivalent -O-O- structure in the molecule FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
16 Corrosive to metals Classification not possible
-
-
- - No data available. FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
17 Desensitized explosives -
-
-
- - - - -

HEALTH HAZARDS
Hazard class Classification Pictogram
Signal word
Hazard statement
(code)
Precautionary statement
(code)
Rationale for the classification Classification year (FY) GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government
1 Acute toxicity (Oral) Category 4


Warning
H302 P301+P312
P264
P270
P330
P501
Based on reports of LD50 values of 700 mg/kg (PATTY (6th, 2012), SIDS (2011)), 1,100 mg/kg (Environmental Risk Assessment for Chemical Substances Vol.6, Tentative Hazard Assessment Sheet (Ministry of the Environment, 2008)), 1,830 mg/kg (PATTY (6th, 2012)), 730-1,830 mg/kg (DFGOT vol. 19 (2003)) and 1,100-1,850 mg/kg (NTP TR19 (1992)) for rats, it was classified in Category 4. FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
1 Acute toxicity (Dermal) Classification not possible
-
-
- - Classification not possible due to lack of data. FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
1 Acute toxicity (Inhalation: Gases) Not classified (Not applicable)
-
-
- - Liquid (GHS definition) FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
1 Acute toxicity (Inhalation: Vapours) Category 4


Warning
H332 P304+P340
P261
P271
P312
In preparation. Check the Japanese version. FY2022 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2019 revised edition (Ver. 2.1))
1 Acute toxicity (Inhalation: Dusts and mists) Classification not possible
-
-
- - Classification not possible due to lack of data. FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
2 Skin corrosion/irritation Category 1


Danger
H314 P301+P330+P331
P303+P361+P353
P305+P351+P338
P304+P340
P260
P264
P280
P310
P321
P363
P405
P501
In preparation. Check the Japanese version. FY2022 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2019 revised edition (Ver. 2.1))
3 Serious eye damage/eye irritation Category 1


Danger
H318 P305+P351+P338
P280
P310
In eye irritation tests with rabbits, there are reports that irritation or corrosivity was observed (SIDS (2011), DFGOT vol. 19 (2003)), and that burns occurred in the cornea (PATTY (6th, 2012)). In addition, there are many descriptions that it showed strong corrosivity to human eyes (SIDS (2011), NTP TR19 (1992)), and there is a description that conjunctivitis and keratitis occurred, leaving irreversible damages (PATTY (6th, 2012)). From the above results, it was classified in Category 1. Besides, the pH of this substance is 2.2 (at 10 g/L, 20 deg C) (IUCLID (2000)). FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
4 Respiratory sensitization Classification not possible
-
-
- - Classification not possible due to lack of data. FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
4 Skin sensitization Not classified
-
-
- - Based on the result that in a Buehler test (OECD TG406, GLP-compliant) with guinea pigs, after the challenge, no skin reaction was observed in all 20 treated animals and it was negative (SIDS (2011)), it was classified as "Not classified." Information in SIDS (2011) was added, and the category was changed. FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
5 Germ cell mutagenicity Classification not possible
-
-
- - Classification not possible due to lack of data. There were no in vivo data. As for in vitro, it was concluded that it was negative in all of bacterial reverse mutation tests, a gene mutation test and a chromosomal aberration test with cultured mammalian cells and sister chromatid exchange tests with human lymphocytes and cultured mammalian cells (SIDS (2011), PATTY (6th, 2012), IUCLID (2000), NTP DB (Access on July 2014), DFGOT vol. 19 (2003)). FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
6 Carcinogenicity Not classified
-
-
- - There was no classification by international organizations. As for individual information, the results were negative in carcinogenicity tests (equivalent to OECD TG 453) with rats and mice (both males and females) administered by feeding at doses of potassium formate up to 2,000 mg/kg/day for 2 years (rats: 104 weeks, mice: 80 weeks) (SIDS (2011)). In addition, it was negative in a test in which calcium formate was administered by drinking water to male and female rats at 150-200 mg/kg/day for 1.5 years (there is a description that test conditions were inadequate) (BUA 81 (1995)). From the above, it was classified as "Not classified" since both carcinogenicity tests with rats and mice were negative. FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
7 Reproductive toxicity Classification not possible
-
-
- - Although there is a report that there were no effects on the body weight and body length of the offspring in a multi-generation reproductive toxicity test with rats through the oral route (drinking water) (Environmental Risk Assessment for Chemical Substances Vol.6, Tentative Hazard Assessment Sheet (Ministry of the Environment, 2008), DFGOT vol. 19 (2003)), it was a single dose test and there was inadequate information to evaluate. In addition, although there is a report that when rats were administered by drinking water at 1.0% for up to 7 months, the survival rate of offspring was reduced by 50-67% (NTP TR19 (1992)), and there was no further detailed description of the test method and results.
In a teratogenicity test with mice through the oral route (gavage), no effects on the neural tube were observed in fetuses examined on days 10 and 18 of gestation (PATTY (6th, 2012), Environmental Risk Assessment for Chemical Substances Vol.6, Tentative Hazard Assessment Sheet (Ministry of the Environment, 2008), DFGOT vol. 19 (2003)). Since the purpose of this test was to investigate the mechanism of methanol-induced exencephaly with sodium formate, and this is a test in which the treatment period was limited to Day 8 of gestation which is the sensitive phase of methanol-induced exencephaly, it is considered insufficient information on teratogenicity other than exencephaly.
As above, it was classified as "Classification not possible" since there was inadequate information on reproductive toxicity (fertility, teratogenicity).
FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
8 Specific target organ toxicity - Single exposure Category 1 (central nervous system, respiratory organs, blood system, kidney)


Danger
H370 P308+P311
P260
P264
P270
P321
P405
P501
This substance was highly corrosive and caused damage to the mouth, throat, esophagus and gastric mucosa (NTP TR19 (1992)).
In humans, on oral ingestion, sore throat, burning sensation, abdominal pain, stomach cramps, vomiting, hyperemia, edema and necrosis of the nose, throat and gastrointestinal mucosa, esophageal stricture, stomach perforation, bleeding of the gastrointestinal tract, other than these, difficulty in swallowing, unconsciousness, central nervous system depression, severe acidosis, hemolysis, hematuria, blood coagulation disorders, anuria, uremia, acute kidney failure, nephropathy, liver function disorders, vascular shock, circulatory collapse, pneumonia and deaths were reported (Environmental Risk Assessment for Chemical Substances Vol.6, Tentative Hazard Assessment Sheet (Ministry of the Environment, 2008), ACGIH (7th, 2001), PATTY (6th, 2012), BUA 81 (1995), DFGOT vol. 19 (2003), NTP TR19 (1992)). Sore throat, cough, burning sensation, shortness of breath, unconsciousness, rhinitis, bronchitis, dyspnea, respiratory failure, pulmonary edema, acidosis, acute renal failure and death were observed by the inhalation exposure to the vapour (NTP TR19 (1992), Environmental Risk Assessment for Chemical Substances Vol.6, Tentative Hazard Assessment Sheet (Ministry of the Environment, 2008)). By dermal exposure, death after 6 hours due to significant difficulty in swallowing and dyspnea in a worker who was accidentally splashed in the face with hot formic acid (ACGIH (7th, 2001)), and burns and severe acidosis in an accident where more than 35% of the whole body skin of a 3-year-old girl was exposed, were reported (PATTY (6th, 2012)). Other than these, although the route of exposure was not described, there were reports of central nervous system depression including visual and mental disturbances due to large amounts of exposure (PATTY (6th, 2012)), and that farmers exposed to a preservative solution of this substance developed severe cardiovascular and kidney diseases (PATTY (6th, 2012)).
As for experimental animals, hunched posture, dyspnea, bloody nose and blood in the urine, and hypothermia were observed by oral administration to rats, hyperemia of the stomach, liver and kidney were observed in the pathological examination, and salivation, loss of pain reflex, dyspnea, respiration sounds, flatulence, apathy, hunched posture, and unsteady gait were observed after inhalation exposure in rats (SIDS (2011)). These findings were within the guidance value range corresponding to Category 1.
From the above, it was classified in Category 1 (central nervous system, respiratory organs, blood system, kidney).
FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
9 Specific target organ toxicity - Repeated exposure Category 2 (respiratory organs)


Warning
H373 P260
P314
P501
There was no information on the effects of repeated exposure to this substance in humans. As for experimental animals, in studies in which rats and mice were exposed to the vapor of this substance by inhalation for 13 weeks, although no systemic effects to identify the target organ were observed, as for local effects, degeneration of the olfactory epithelium (rats and mice) and squamous metaplasia of the respiratory epithelium (rats) were observed at the concentration corresponding to Category 1 (0.12 mg/L/6 hours) in mice and at that corresponding to Category 2 (0.24 mg/L/6 hours) in rats (SIDS (2011), NTP TR19 (1992), DFGOT vol. 19 (2003), PATTY (6th, 2012)). Since the effects by inhalation exposure with humans were unknown, it was classified in Category 2 (respiratory organs) based on the category corresponding to the concentrations at which the effects on the respiratory organs were commonly observed in both of rats and mice. FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))
10 Aspiration hazard Classification not possible
-
-
- - Classification not possible due to lack of data. FY2014 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2013 revised edition (Ver. 1.0))

ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS
Hazard class Classification Pictogram
Signal word
Hazard statement
(code)
Precautionary statement
(code)
Rationale for the classification Classification year (FY) GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government
11 Hazardous to the aquatic environment Short term (Acute) Category 3
-
-
H402 P273
P501
In preparation. Check the Japanese version. FY2022 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2019 revised edition (Ver. 2.1))
11 Hazardous to the aquatic environment Long term (Chronic) Not classified
-
-
- - In preparation. Check the Japanese version. FY2022 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2019 revised edition (Ver. 2.1))
12 Hazardous to the ozone layer Classification not possible
-
-
- - In preparation. Check the Japanese version. FY2022 GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government (FY2019 revised edition (Ver. 2.1))


NOTE:
  • GHS Classification Result by the Japanese Government is intended to provide a reference for preparing a GHS label or SDS for users. To include the same classification result in a label or SDS for Japan is NOT mandatory.
  • Users can cite or copy this classification result when preparing a GHS label or SDS. Please be aware, however, that the responsibility for a label or SDS prepared by citing or copying this classification result lies with users.
  • This GHS classification was conducted based on the information sources and the guidance for classification and judgement which are described in the GHS Classification Guidance for the Japanese Government etc. Using other literature, test results etc. as evidence and including different content from this classification result in a label or SDS are allowed.
  • Hazard statement and precautionary statement will show by hovering the mouse cursor over a code in the column of "Hazard statement" and "Precautionary statement," respectively. In the excel file, both the codes and statements are provided.
  • A blank or "-" in the column of "Classification" denotes that a classification for the hazard class was not conducted in the year.
  • An asterisk “*” in the column of “Classification” denotes that “Not classified (or No applicable)” and/or “Classification not possible” is applicable. Details are described in the column of “Rationale for the classification”. If no English translation is available for “Rationale for the classification,” please refer to the Japanese version of the results.

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