Printer Friendly
The Free Library
19,573,952 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

A deadly threat in undeployed airbags.


While in graduate school, Eric A. Betterton was working with sodium azide sodium azide NaN3 Microbiology A toxic salt added–concentration, 0.01%, to a transport medium of lab specimens–eg, urine for culturing bacteria, which prevents oxidative phosphorylation and bacterial overgrowth  when some grains of the white chemical got wet. Immediately, the crystals transformed into the highly volatile hydrazoic acid Noun 1. hydrazoic acid - a colorless explosive liquid that is volatile and poisonous and foul-smelling
azoimide, HN, hydrogen azide

explosive - a chemical substance that undergoes a rapid chemical change (with the production of gas) on being heated or
, and the chemist inhaled in·hale  
v. in·haled, in·hal·ing, in·hales

v.tr.
1. To draw (air or smoke, for example) into the lungs by breathing; inspire.

2.
 just the barest whiff.

At once, his skin reddened and he fell dizzy with a wildly racing heart. As his head throbbed, Betterton's breathing grew difficult. "I thought I was toast," he recalls.

Sodium azide is an explosive, broad-spectrum biocide biocide (bī`əsīd'), synonym for pesticide.  with toxicity comparable to sodium cyanide's. "Lethal to practically all forms of life, just a few grams can kill a person, notes Betterton, an atmospheric chemist now at the University of Arizona (body, education) University of Arizona - The University was founded in 1885 as a Land Grant institution with a three-fold mission of teaching, research and public service.  in Tucson. So, imagine his surprise a few years ago when he read that most airbags pack 50 to 200 grams of sodium azide (Na[N.sub.3]) each. It's the source of the nitrogen gas that inflates the devices.

U.S. vehicles are a reservoir for some 5 million kilograms of sodium azide, he learned, with lots more due to hit the streets as the latest-model cars increasingly include passenger-side airbags, side-impact bags, and ceiling bags. Inside airbags, the azide azide

inhibitor of cytochrome c oxidase (or complex IV) of the respiratory electron-transfer chain.
 is safe, Betterton notes. However, his team's new data indicate that if the compound gets released--either during airbag manufacturing or when a car is junked--it could persist stably until moistened. Then, transformed to hydrazoic acid (Na[N.sub.3]), it could move with air or water through the environment.

Auto recyclers who might shred or smash canisters of sodium azide face the biggest safety threat, says Scott Schmidt of the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers in Washington, D.C. When airbags were rare, he says, many recyclers didn't know to remove or trigger the devices before a car was shredded. But today, he says, the azide "is something recyclers are definitely aware of."

He concedes the possibility of accidents, however, especially by thieves or recyclers "who may take out the driver- and passenger-side airbags and [miss the newer] side or roof airbags."

Betterton's studies have confirmed a widespread suspicion that once released from its cannister, hydrazoic acid breaks down in sunlight. His team's studies reveal, however, that it doesn't break down quickly. "We've shown that it can stay in the atmosphere for time scales that could range from minutes to hours, maybe longer," he told SCIENCE NEWS. That's long enough, he worries, for a plume of the gas to waft into residential neighborhoods or collect in sewers and tunnels.

Because hydrazoic acid can oxidize oxidize /ox·i·dize/ (ok´si-diz) to cause to combine with oxygen or to remove hydrogen.

ox·i·dize
v.
1. To combine with oxygen; change into an oxide.

2.
 into harmless nitrogen dioxide--as the azide does when airbags inflate--the Arizona group began scouting for naturally occurring agents that might neutralize the poison in water or moist soil. Though dissolved oxygen and hydrogen peroxide hydrogen peroxide, chemical compound, H2O2, a colorless, syrupy liquid that is a strong oxidizing agent and, in water solution, a weak acid. It is miscible with cold water and is soluble in alcohol and ether.  seemed good candidates, Betterton reports that at concentrations typical in the environment, neither neutralized the acid in less than weeks or months.

He and his colleagues then explored ozone, which finds use in some water-treatment plants. Though it oxidized oxidized

having been modified by the process of oxidation.


oxidized cellulose
see absorbable cellulose.
 the poison in seconds to minutes, Betterton reports, the azide could trigger ozone's destruction. "So, you need about 30 molecules of ozone for every molecule of azide you want to destroy," he says.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:sodium azide
Author:J.R.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Apr 15, 2000
Words:517
Previous Article:The power of caffeine and pale tea.
Next Article:Unsung benefits of darker, tasty oils.
Topics:



Related Articles
Subtle impact: airbags' effect on driving behavior.
Airbag alert.
Airbags and gasbags: airbags aren't much of a risk - but it's one we should be free to choose.
When air bags injure or kill.
Letters.
Airbags move to airplanes. (Tech Talk).
Name that element!
Fixing the inflation situation.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles