UN 1350: Sulfur
DOT Classification and Shipping
UN 1350 is assigned the proper shipping name Sulfur in the U.S. DOT Hazardous Materials Table (49 CFR 172.101). It is classified as a Class 4.1 Flammable Solid material, Packing Group III. Required label(s): 4.1.
Packing group indicates the degree of danger within a hazard class: PG I is high danger, PG II medium, PG III low. The proper shipping name, hazard class, UN number, and packing group together form the basic shipping description that must appear on shipping papers and, where required, on the package and placard.
Emergency Response (ERG Guide 133)
Hazards: Flammable. May be ignited by friction, heat, sparks. May burn rapidly with flare-burning effect.
Fire: Water spray, foam, dry chemical. Some may be extinguished with CO2.
Spill: Eliminate ignition sources. Do not touch. Cover with dry earth, sand, or non-combustible material.
Chemical and Physical Properties
Propylene is a colorless gas with a faint petroleum like odor. It is shipped as a liquefied gas under its own vapor pressure. For transportation it may be stenched. Contact with the liquid can cause frostbite. It is easily ignited. The vapors are heavier than air. Any leak can either be liquid or vapor. It can asphyxiate by the displacement of air. Under prolonged exposure to fire or intense heat the containers may rupture violently and rocket. It is used to make other chemicals. Can cause explosion.
Regulatory Data
A release of this material at or above its CERCLA reportable quantity (1 lb) requires immediate notification to the National Response Center at 800-424-8802.
Special Provisions
49 CFR 172.102 special provision codes for this entry: 30, B120, IB8, IP3, T1, TP33. These codes modify the general requirements (packaging, quantity limits, exceptions) for this specific material. Look up each code in 49 CFR 172.102 for the full text.
Need the full interactive record? Open UN 1350 in the SpillNerd lookup tool for the live database entry with placard graphics, GHS pictograms, full segregation tables, and synonym search. For another material, use the UN number and chemical lookup.
Reference data compiled from the DOT Hazardous Materials Table (49 CFR 172.101), the 2024 Emergency Response Guidebook, and public chemical databases (PubChem, NIOSH, EPA). Always verify the correct shipping description against the current regulation and the manufacturer's SDS Section 14 before shipping.