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Unlike nerve agents, phosgene must be inhaled to cause harm and cannot be absorbed through the skin.
Doesn't it also have a blinding action on the eyes? Is this the gas that blinded so many WW1 soldiers, or was that something else? -- Chris Q 08:26 Mar 19, 2003 (UTC)
The link to the MSDS sheet does not work I would fix this but I am afraid of making a mistake. ~Chemiker 17:45 Mar 15, 2005
The picture at the top right of the article is of the compound Cl2O... there is no C, while the formula given for phosgene is COCl2, which has a C... Where's the missing C? 66.102.74.252 04:20 May 29, 2005
This page, which purports to instruct the creation of chloroform, cautions that stored chloroform can mutate into phosgene. Is this true? What's the reaction? Thanks. Ayeroxor 11:30, Jun 4, 2005 (UTC)
i hv tried to produce it @ home by exposing chloroform to moist air in presence of sunlight,but it doesn't work. Anyways, i don't know how to identify wheather PHOSGENE is produced or not!
Why is there production information on phosgene in the article? Except terrorists, would there be anyone interested in making phosgene?
I don't think this should be in the article. Because it's beyond the scope. Why do we need to know how to make war gas? Too much detail.
173.178.151.144 (talk) 04:19, 12 August 2014 (UTC)
What is the mechanism of toxicity of phosgene gas? Ed Sanville 10:45, 22 April 2006 (UTC)
These sentences from the article don't make sense:
How is this reaction possible? COCl2 + O2 ≠ CHCl3, as there is no hydrogen on the left side of the equation, and ultraviolet radiation is not powerful enough to cause a nuclear reaction. ~ Oni Lukos ct 21:10, 2 October 2006 (UTC)
The article says: "Phosgene gas has no color but may appear as a white or yellowish haze when released into air." That seems to be a self-contradiction; if phosgene has no colour, how can it be "yellowish"? Is the colour due to an impurity? 216.59.230.140 01:24, 16 December 2006 (UTC)
I'm not a chemist but I had a discussion recently with someone who sells butane and propane. This question has nothing to do any accident or lawsuit involving phosgene or LP-gases, but I am inquiring on the accuracy of this person's statement:
He says that on his ranch someone accidently used an anhydrous ammonia tank that had not been properly purged as a propane tank and had it filled with an LPG mix of propane and butane. He says that the NH3 molecules on the interior surface picked up the butane or combined with and and when it was burned in a space heater, created phosgene gas (carbon monoxide from burning the hydrocarbon combined with chlorine molecules in the ammonia compound. I said this was not possible unless chlorine was present in the ammonia or ammonium chloride was involved.
Is that possible? I would appreciate any discussion from a reputable source to settle this argument.Jbjoseph 18:36, 31 January 2007 (UTC)
I believe phosgene also occurs as an equilibrium reaction.
CO + Cl2 <---> COCL2
The deadly and insidious toxicity of phosgene upon inhalation is not mediated by hydrochloric acid formed by hydrolysis. Reasons are:
1. Median lethal concentrations of phosgene in mammals are two decimals below those of HCl that can form. In other words: low and medium concentrations of phosgene in the air do produce lung injury, that could be achieved only by many hundreds of times the overall amouth of HCl, that would be formed by complete hydrolysis of the phosgene inhaled; even taking the high water solubility of HCl gas into account.
2. In acute intoxications, there are normaly no signs of significant acid exposure, such as acidosis.
3. The short characteristic of phosgene as a chemical given is already giving a hint, what mechanisms are involved in its incredible pulmonar toxicity: yes, it's highly electrophile. It acts as an alkylant (or, acylant) agent and readily attacks functional groups such as the thiole gruop, -SH, the amino group, -NH2, or activated hydroxyl group, -OH; it forms intermediary isocyanates, chlorocarbonates and chlorothiocarbonates within the proteins and other essential molecules in the cell membranes of alveoles and tiny capillaries, perfuding them. This is consistent with the effects of other alkylant (acylant) chemicals upon inhalation: much the same type of intoxication is caused by dimethyl sulfate, allyl chloride, benzyl chloride, sulfur mustard or diazomethane if these are inhaled.
4. Unfortunately, my sources are all not in english.
Could someone expert in the field of toxicology be so kind and take an eye upon the subject? Phosgene is, after all, one of the most important industrial chemicals and poses a considerable thread of poisoning, let alone its historical relevance (it were phosgene and diphosgene that killed ~80% of chemical warfare casualties in world war 1). Thanks.--84.163.103.210 (talk) 03:06, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
How about someone posting a reference to the discovery of vials of phosgene by Iraq weapons inspectors in the United Nations building on 30 Aug 2007?
Here's the link: [http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx?type=topNews&storyid=2007-08-30T170627Z_01_N30440927_RTRUKOC_0_US-UN-CHEMICALS.xml&src=rss&rpc=22&sp=true
-- -- —Preceding unsigned comment added by 128.194.23.43 (talk) 18:05, August 30, 2007 (UTC)
Although not related, both these words should be tagged in the article or perhaps above. Phosphine is also a toxic gas and as the words sound similar, it may avoid confusion.Htcs (talk) 02:34, 9 September 2008 (UTC)
Many intelligent nonchemists are under the impression that phosgene's lethality arises from the release of HCl due to its hydrolysis. But an authoritative text and the chemistry described in the article explain that the mechanism is otherwise. Phosgene preferentially reacts with amino groups, it does not hydrolyze (as you seem to understand). The reaction with amine groups is similar to its basic organic chemistry:
Ullmann's Encylopedia of Industrial Chemistry is widely recognized, in the first world at least, as an authoritative source of chemical information. Your Professor Aggrawal is not recognized as an authoritative source, although I am sure that he is well intentioned and a nice person. Your misunderstanding is a common one (I used to buy it) but upon reflexion it makes no sense since many other hydrogen chloride sources such thionyl chloride are not nearly as lethal.--Smokefoot (talk) 22:53, 4 April 2010 (UTC)
It looks like the density of the gas at 15°C has the wrong units: it should be (g/L), instead of the reported (g/cm3). (As it currently reads, the gas at 15°C is ~3 times denser than the liquid at 0°C!) Frank Somer (talk) 22:32, 8 November 2010 (UTC)
When I was a lad I lived in a house which had a wartime air-raid shelter in the back garden. On a wall inside there was a round glass bulb (larger than a cricket ball) which was blue or contained blue liquid. I was told this was carbon tetrachloride used as a "fire grenade". Later a college-mate told me that using these could cause the creation of phosgene. Is that true? Unbuttered parsnip (talk) mytime= Thu 12:42, wikitime= 04:42, 6 November 2014 (UTC)
Contains a photograph of a pile of phosgene in Louisiana
84.226.214.17 (talk) 11:33, 6 November 2019 (UTC)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the United Arab hasn't existed for a very long time? Additionally, section 4.4 has no citations whatsoever. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Teritaal (talk • contribs) 13:06, 30 April 2021 (UTC)
Currently the intro reads oddly like it was written by this chemical’s PR agent: “ Phosgene is a valued industrial building block,…” with no mention of its toxicity or history of use as a chemical weapon. Cheakamus (talk) 11:37, 12 February 2022 (UTC)
Pretty sure the K(eq) listed should be for 300 C not 300 K. If it were 300 K, it wouldn't be relevant to talking about reactions above 200 C because 300 K is about room temperature. Someone should verify the temperature and make the change if necessary Science Is My Life (talk) 18:02, 4 July 2022 (UTC)
First sentence of the article says it's an "organic chemical compound", but the article is categorized as "Inorganic carbon compounds". Don't think it makes sense to say it's both. 174.44.101.229 (talk) 16:50, 2 August 2022 (UTC)
I plan to remove the mention of the February 2023 East Palestine Train Derailment, as by my experience with chemical engineering, it is incorrect information and likely just based on rumors that have been circulating online. Complete combustion of vinyl chloride will produce HCl, H2O, and CO2. Incomplete combustion may leave some decomposed vinyl chloride in the form of CO, C2H2, and HCl. Under no mechanism I know of in ambient pressure combustion would additional chloride-carbon bonds be formed as needed to produce phosgene.
I am open to being shown legitimate evidence of such a reaction, but it does not currently seem reasonable. The cited article associated with this entry also provides no support that phosgene has been produced and only comments on some foxes acting nervous/sick for unknown reasons. As such, the note does not seem appropriate for the Phosgene page, so I'll make the planned edit. Further discussion can be had here if there are arguments to reintroduce the section. 68.119.233.31 (talk) 21:44, 13 February 2023 (UTC)
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