Registration Dossier

Data platform availability banner - registered substances factsheets

Please be aware that this old REACH registration data factsheet is no longer maintained; it remains frozen as of 19th May 2023.

The new ECHA CHEM database has been released by ECHA, and it now contains all REACH registration data. There are more details on the transition of ECHA's published data to ECHA CHEM here.

Diss Factsheets

Classification & Labelling & PBT assessment

PBT assessment

Currently viewing:

Administrative data

PBT assessment: overall result

Referenceopen allclose all

Name:
Reaction mass of hexadecyl dihydrogen phosphate and cetyl alcohol (mono-C16 PSE and C16-OH) - legal entity composition
Type of composition:
legal entity composition of the substance
State / form:
solid: bulk
Related composition:
Reaction mass of hexadecyl dihydrogen phosphate and cetyl alcohol (mono-C16 PSE and C16-OH) - boundary composition
Reference substance:
Reaction mass of hexadecyl dihydrogen phosphate and cetyl alcohol (mono-C16 PSE and C16-OH) - legal entity composition
Reference substance:
Reaction mass of hexadecyl dihydrogen phosphate and cetyl alcohol (mono-C16 PSE and C16-OH) - legal entity composition
Name:
Reaction mass of hexadecyl dihydrogen phosphate and cetyl alcohol (mono-C16 PSE and C16-OH) - boundary composition
Type of composition:
boundary composition of the substance
State / form:
solid: bulk
Reference substance:
Reaction mass of hexadecyl dihydrogen phosphate and cetyl alcohol (mono-C16 PSE and C16-OH) - boundary composition
Reference substance:
Reaction mass of hexadecyl dihydrogen phosphate and cetyl alcohol (mono-C16 PSE and C16-OH) - boundary composition
PBT status:
the substance is not PBT / vPvB
Justification:

Based on the overall data on biotic degradation, bioaccumulation and toxicity, ‘mono- C16 PSE and C16 -OH’ is not ‘P’or ‘B’or ‘T’, therefore does not fulfil the PBT or vPvB criteria as set out in the REACH Technical Guidance Document Chapter R11 as well as Annex XIII to the REACH Regulation.

Likely routes of exposure:

Dermal and inhalation