Petroleum Gases, Liquefied, Sweetened (LPG)
- Other solvents
- CAS 68476-86-8
CarCareTruth tracks Petroleum Gases, Liquefied, Sweetened (LPG) (CAS 68476-86-8) as a car-care ingredient. It is classified as a VOC.
Extremely flammable gas (H220). Simple asphyxiant at high concentrations. Standard hazards of LPG propellants — use in well-ventilated spaces.
Petroleum gases, liquefied, sweetened is a refined liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) used as an aerosol propellant. The "sweetened" designation indicates a sulfur-removal refining step that reduces odor without changing the functional propellant behavior.
Health & environment profile
- VOC
- yes
- 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
- 2/5
Common questions about Petroleum Gases, Liquefied, Sweetened (LPG)
- What is Petroleum Gases, Liquefied, Sweetened (LPG) used for in car care?
- Sulfur-treated liquefied petroleum gas; used as an aerosol propellant and pressurizing agent
- Is Petroleum Gases, Liquefied, Sweetened (LPG) a VOC?
- Yes. Petroleum Gases, Liquefied, Sweetened (LPG) is classified as a volatile organic compound (VOC).
- Is Petroleum Gases, Liquefied, Sweetened (LPG) on California's Proposition 65 list?
- No. Petroleum Gases, Liquefied, Sweetened (LPG) is not on California's Proposition 65 list.
No products on file contain this (yet)
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.