Chemical Property of Bendiocarb
Chemical Property:
- Vapor Pressure:0.00124mmHg at 25°C
- Melting Point:128-130oC
- Refractive Index:1.523
- Boiling Point:298.769 °C at 760 mmHg
- PKA:11.98±0.46(Predicted)
- Flash Point:134.491 °C
- PSA:56.79000
- Density:1.204 g/cm3
- LogP:2.30300
- Storage Temp.:0-6°C
- Water Solubility.:280 mg l-1 (20 °C)
- XLogP3:1.7
- Hydrogen Bond Donor Count:1
- Hydrogen Bond Acceptor Count:4
- Rotatable Bond Count:2
- Exact Mass:223.08445790
- Heavy Atom Count:16
- Complexity:279
- Transport DOT Label:Poison
- Purity/Quality:
-
Bendiocarb *data from reagent suppliers
Safty Information:
- Pictogram(s):
T,
N
- Hazard Codes:T,N
- Statements:
21-23/25-50/53
- Safety Statements:
22-36/37-45-60-61
- MSDS Files:
-
SDS file from LookChem
Total 1 MSDS from other Authors
Useful:
- Chemical Classes:Pesticides -> Carbamate Insecticides
- Canonical SMILES:CC1(OC2=C(O1)C(=CC=C2)OC(=O)NC)C
-
Description
Bendiocarb belongs to a kind of carbamate insecticide. It can be used in homes, industrial plants and food storage sites for the treatment of various kinds of insects including mosquitoes, flies, wasps, ants, fleas, cockroaches, spider, silverfish, ticks and other pests in homes, industrial plants, and food storage sites. In agriculture, it is used for the treatment of a variety of insects such as beetles, aphids, mites and caterpillars. Bendiocarb can block the activity of some enzymes necessary for the normal nerve transmission, further affecting the normal operation of the insects’ nervous system. It can kill the pests through either contact or ingestion. However, its applications have been cancelled in some countries including the United States due to its toxicity effects on Human beings and other animals including birds and fishes. Bendiocarb is an odourless, non-corrosive white crystalline solid. Bendiocarb is a carbamate
ester. Carbamates are chemically similar to but more reactive than amides. Like amides, they
form polymers such as polyurethane resins. Some of the formulations of bendiocarb are
classified as general use pesticides (GUP), while Turcam and its 2.5 G formulation have been
classified as restricted use pesticides (RUP). Bendiocarb is stable under normal temperatures
and pressures, but should not be mixed with alkaline preparations. Thermal decomposition
products may include toxic oxides of nitrogen. It is noncorrosive. Flammable gaseous
hydrogen is produced by the combination of active metals or nitrides with carbamates.
Strongly oxidising acids, peroxides, and hydroperoxides are incompatible with carbamates.
Bendiocarb as a carbamate insecticide is effective against a wide range of insects that
cause nuisance and act as disease vectors. It is used to control mosquitoes, flies, wasps, ants,
fleas, cockroaches, silverfish, ticks, and other pests in homes, industrial plants, and food
storage sites. Bendiocarb is also used as a seed treatment on sugar beets and maize and
against snails and slugs. Pesticides containing bendiocarb are formulated as dusts, granules,
ultra-low volume sprays, and wettable powders. It gets hydrolysed rapidly in alkali
media and slows under acid and neutral conditions. Flammable gaseous hydrogen is produced
by the combination of active metals or nitrides with carbamates.
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Uses
Contact insecticide used to control beetles, wireworms, flies, wasps and mosquitoes
in beets and maize. Bendiocarb is a benzodioxolyl carbamate derivative. Bendiocarb is commonly used as an insecticide in agriculture against a wide range of pests and insects. Bendiocarb is one of the insecticides recomm
ended by world health organization (WHO) for use in malaria control. Contact insecticide. Bendiocarb is a contact and ingested insecticide with some systemic
activity in crop plants. It is active against many public health,
industrial and storage pests such as Formicidae, Blattodae, Culicidae,
Muscidae and Siphonaptera.