Baby Safety / Compounds / Carbonyl fluoride

Is Carbonyl fluoride safe for babies and kids?

Context-dependent for kids

(Babies-specific data is limited; this page draws from human pregnant context.) Pregnancy alters the metabolism and distribution of Carbonyl fluoride, potentially increasing fetal exposure. The developing embryo/fetus is vulnerable during organogenesis (weeks 3-8) and neurological development. Placental transfer should be assumed.

What is carbonyl fluoride?

The IUPAC name is carbonyl difluoride.

Also known as: carbonyl difluoride, Carbonic difluoride, Carbon oxyfluoride, Fluorophosgene.

IUPAC name
carbonyl difluoride
CAS number
353-50-4
Molecular formula
CF2O
Molecular weight
66.007 g/mol
SMILES
FC(F)=O
PubChem CID
9623

Risk for babies

Context-dependent

Pregnancy alters the metabolism and distribution of Carbonyl fluoride, potentially increasing fetal exposure. The developing embryo/fetus is vulnerable during organogenesis (weeks 3-8) and neurological development. Placental transfer should be assumed.

No specific reproductive toxicity data identified, but pregnancy-specific safety data is limited for most chemicals. Precautionary minimization of exposure is recommended.

What to do: Minimize exposure during pregnancy and lactation. Consult healthcare provider regarding specific risks. Consider alternative products with lower hazard profiles.

Risk for pregnant and nursing people

Context-dependent

Pregnancy alters the metabolism and distribution of Carbonyl fluoride, potentially increasing fetal exposure. The developing embryo/fetus is vulnerable during organogenesis (weeks 3-8) and neurological development. Placental transfer should be assumed.

No specific reproductive toxicity data identified, but pregnancy-specific safety data is limited for most chemicals. Precautionary minimization of exposure is recommended.

What to do: Minimize exposure during pregnancy and lactation. Consult healthcare provider regarding specific risks. Consider alternative products with lower hazard profiles.

Regulatory consensus

2 regulatory and scientific bodies have classified Carbonyl fluoride. The classifications differ — that's the data.

AgencyYearClassificationNotes
GHSSkin hazard
GHSInhalation hazard

Regulators apply different standards of evidence — animal-data weighting, exposure-pattern assumptions, epidemiological power thresholds — which is why two scientific bodies can review the same data and reach different conclusions. The disagreement is the data.

Where kids encounter carbonyl fluoride

  • IndustrialPTFE/Teflon thermal decomposition, Fluoropolymer processing, Welding fluoropolymer-coated metals

Safer alternatives

Lower-risk approaches that achieve a similar outcome to Carbonyl fluoride:

  • Safer process chemistry; Green chemistry alternatives; Exposure controls
    Trade-offs: Requires R&D investment to redesign synthesis routes; may reduce yield or throughput initially; long-term benefits include reduced waste treatment costs, regulatory compliance, and worker safety; 12 Principles of Green Chemistry framework available.
    Relative cost: 1.2-2×

Frequently asked questions

What products contain carbonyl fluoride?

Carbonyl fluoride appears in: PTFE/Teflon thermal decomposition (Industrial); Fluoropolymer processing (Industrial).

See Carbonyl fluoride in the baby app

Look up products containing carbonyl fluoride, compare to alternatives, and explore the full data record.

Open in baby View raw API data

Sources (3)

  1. PubChem Compound CID 9623 — database
  2. EPA CompTox Chemicals Dashboard — DTXSID7059858 — epa
  3. ATSDR Toxicological Profile — CAS 353-50-4 — reference

Reference data, not professional advice. Aggregates publicly available regulatory and scientific data; not a substitute for veterinary, medical, legal, or regulatory advice. Why we built ALETHEIA →