Pure diethanolamine is solid at room temperature and white in colour, but it's tendencies to absorb water and to supercool mean that it is most often encountered as a colourless and viscous liquid. Diethanolamine is often used as a surfactant and a corrosion inhibitor as well as to remove hydrogen sulphide and carbon dioxide from natural gas. Diethanolamine has been classified as possibly carcinogenic to humans by the International Agency for Research on Cancer.
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