Dodecanedioic Acid Bis Ester (RM Docandioic Acid Bis Ester Reaction Products)
- UV stabilizers
Dodecanedioic Acid Bis Ester (RM Docandioic Acid Bis Ester Reaction Products) appears in 1 of the 1,812 car-care products CarCareTruth tracks (as of June 2026).
No GHS hazard classification at typical use concentrations. Low acute toxicity. Used as a UV inhibitor in leather care and plastic-protection formulas.
Dodecanedioic acid bis ester reaction products are non-fluorinated ester-based UV stabilizers used at low concentrations in polymer emulsion products. They function by absorbing UV light to slow photo-oxidation of leather and polymer coatings. Not classified as PFAS; no fluoropolymer chemistry. Biodegradability data are limited.
Health & environment profile
- VOC
- no
- Prop 65 listed
- no
- Asthmagen
- no
- EPA Safer Choice
- no
- Aquatic toxicity
- no
- Biodegradable
- no
- Bioaccumulative
- no
- Persistent
- no
- Ozone depleting
- no
- Microplastic
- no
- PFAS
- no
- Env. score
- 5/5
Common questions about Dodecanedioic Acid Bis Ester (RM Docandioic Acid Bis Ester Reaction Products)
- What is Dodecanedioic Acid Bis Ester (RM Docandioic Acid Bis Ester Reaction Products) used for in car care?
- UV stabilizer / light absorber in water-based polymer systems
- Is Dodecanedioic Acid Bis Ester (RM Docandioic Acid Bis Ester Reaction Products) a VOC?
- No. Dodecanedioic Acid Bis Ester (RM Docandioic Acid Bis Ester Reaction Products) is not classified as a volatile organic compound (VOC).
- Is Dodecanedioic Acid Bis Ester (RM Docandioic Acid Bis Ester Reaction Products) on California's Proposition 65 list?
- No. Dodecanedioic Acid Bis Ester (RM Docandioic Acid Bis Ester Reaction Products) is not on California's Proposition 65 list.
1 product contain this
Armor All Leather Care GelProp 65leather-care
Related
Health and environment notes translate the manufacturer Safety Data Sheet, the GHS classification, and authoritative regulatory listings (California Prop 65, EPA). Not medical advice. They describe the ingredient itself; whether a hazard applies to a finished product depends on its concentration and how it's used.