Department of Energy Argonne National Laboratory Office of Science NEWTON's Homepage NEWTON's Homepage
NEWTON, Ask A Scientist!
NEWTON Home Page NEWTON Teachers Visit Our Archives Ask A Question How To Ask A Question Question of the Week Our Expert Scientists Volunteer at NEWTON! Frequently Asked Questions Referencing NEWTON About NEWTON About Ask A Scientist Education At Argonne Pesticide Reaction and Water
Name: sarah
Status: student
Age: 16
Location: N/A
Country: N/A
Date: Around 1999 


Question:
I am a grade 12 chemistry student doing an assignment on the Bhopal Disaster in India 1982.

A major component of the pesticides manufactured there was the chemical methyl iso cyanate. This had a huge reaction with water, which produced a poisonous gas.

Would you be able to explain this reaction to me, and why the gas produced respiratory problems? Thankyou


Replies:
I answered almost this exact question a while ago, but I couldn't find it in the archives. So, here it goes again.

The problem in Bhopal was not that the reaction of methyl isocyanate with water created a poisonous gas, but that the reaction allowed methyl isocyanate to escape from its containment. Methyl isocyanate is volatile, irritating to the nose and throat, and toxic. Although it is a liquid at room temperature, methyl isocyanate has a boiling point near human body temperature. At normal room temperature, its vapor pressure is over a third of an atmosphere.

The reaction of methyl isocyanate with water produces methylamine and carbon dioxide,

CH3NCO + H2O --> CH3NH2 + CO2

along with heat. Methylamine and carbon dioxide are both gases at room temperature. The production of gas by the reaction raised the pressure in the container; the generation of heat raised the pressure still further. This rise in pressure caused a rupture of the containment vessel, released the MIC into the surrounding air. The heat also made the methyl isocyanate more volatile (whether or not it boiled, increasing the temperature raised the MIC vapor pressure, meaning that anyone breathing the air got a larger MIC dose).

The chemical plant in Bhopal was the primary source of jobs in the region, so many people lived very close to it. About 2,000 people died quickly as a result of the exposure, and 200,000 more were exposed to the vapor.

Richard E. Barrans Jr., Ph.D.
Assistant Director, PG Research Foundation
Darien, IL USA



Click here to return to the Chemistry Archives

NEWTON is an electronic community for Science, Math, and Computer Science K-12 Educators, sponsored and operated by Argonne National Laboratory's Educational Programs, Andrew Skipor, Ph.D., Head of Educational Programs.

For assistance with NEWTON contact a System Operator (help@newton.dep.anl.gov), or at Argonne's Educational Programs

NEWTON AND ASK A SCIENTIST
Educational Programs
Building 360
9700 S. Cass Ave.
Argonne, Illinois
60439-4845, USA
Update: February 2012
Weclome To Newton

Argonne National Laboratory