Difference between revisions of "Sarin" - New World Encyclopedia

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|  Reference=<ref>United States Senate, 103d Congress, 2d Session. 1994 (May 25). [http://www.gulfweb.org/bigdoc/report/appgb.html Material safety data sheet: Lethal nerve agent sarin (GB)]. ''Gulf War Veteran Resource Pages''. Retrieved August 16, 2008.</ref>
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|  Reference=<ref>United States Senate, 103d Congress, 2d Session, 1994 (May 25), [http://www.gulfweb.org/bigdoc/report/appgb.html Material safety data sheet: Lethal nerve agent sarin (GB),] ''Gulf War Veteran Resource Pages''. Retrieved August 16, 2008.</ref>
 
|  Name = Sarin
 
|  Name = Sarin
 
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'''Sarin''' is a [[phosphorus]]-containing organic chemical, C<sub>4</sub>H<sub>10</sub>FO<sub>2</sub>P, that is extremely toxic to human beings and is used as a [[nerve agent]], attacking the [[nervous system]] by irreversibly inhibiting [[cholinesterase]]. It is a colorless and odorless liquid at room temperature but is highly volatile with the colorless and odorless gas used as a chemical weapon. Chemically known as 2-(Fluoro-methylphosphoryl)oxypropane or ''O''-isopropyl methylphosphonofluoridate, sarin also is known by its [[NATO]] designation of '''GB'''.
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'''Sarin''' is a [[phosphorus]]-containing organic chemical, C<sub>4</sub>H<sub>10</sub>FO<sub>2</sub>P, that is extremely toxic to human beings and is used as a [[nerve agent]], attacking the [[nervous system]] by irreversibly inhibiting [[cholinesterase]]. It is a colorless and odorless liquid at room temperature but is highly volatile, with the colorless and odorless gas used as a chemical weapon. Chemically known as 2-(Fluoro-methylphosphoryl)oxypropane or ''O''-isopropyl methylphosphonofluoridate, sarin also is known by its [[NATO]] designation of '''GB.'''
  
Sarin is classified as a [[weapon of mass destruction]] by the [[United Nations]] in [[UN Resolution 687]]. It was developed by Nazi Germany during World War II and adopted by NATO in the early 1950s as a standard chemical weapon, with both the [[USSR]] and the [[United States]] producing it at that time for military purposes. More recently, sarin was used by Iraq against Iran in the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988), used by a Japanese religious sect, Aum ShinriKyo, in 1995 in killing twelve people and injuring thousands in a Tokyo subway, and used ineffectively in 2004 by Iraqi insurgents against U.S. troops when the insurgents detonated a shell with sarin precursors. Production and stockpiling of sarin was outlawed by the [[Chemical Weapons Convention]] of 1993; the Chemical Weapons Convention officially took effect on April 29, 1997.
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Sarin is classified as a [[weapon of mass destruction]] by the [[United Nations]] in [[UN Resolution 687]]. It was developed by Nazi Germany during [[World War II]] and adopted by NATO in the early 1950s as a standard chemical weapon, with both the [[USSR]] and the [[United States]] producing it at that time for military purposes. More recently, sarin was used by Iraq against Iran in the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988); used by [[Saddam Hussein]], in 1988, against the Iraqi Kurdish town of Halabja, killing an estimated 5,000 people; used in 1995, by a Japanese religious sect, [[Aum ShinriKyo]], killing twelve people and injuring thousands in a Tokyo subway; and used ineffectively, in 2004, by [[Iraqi insurgents]] against U.S. troops when the insurgents detonated a shell with sarin precursors. Production and stockpiling of sarin was outlawed by the [[Chemical Weapons Convention]] of 1993; the Chemical Weapons Convention officially took effect on April 29, 1997.
  
 
==Chemical characteristics==
 
==Chemical characteristics==
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Sarin is one of diverse ''nerve agents'' (also referred to as ''nerve gases,'' though these chemicals are liquid at room temperature), which are a class of [[phosphorus]]-containing [[organic chemistry|organic chemicals]] ([[organophosphate]]s) that disrupt the mechanism by which nerves transfer messages to organs. The disruption is caused by blocking [[acetylcholinesterase]], an [[enzyme]] that normally relaxes the activity of [[acetylcholine]], a [[neurotransmitter]]. Other nerve agents are ([[tabun (nerve agent)|tabun]], [[soman]], [[cyclosarin]], [[VE (nerve agent)|VE]], [[VG (nerve agent)|VG]], [[VM (nerve agent)|VM]], [[VR (nerve agent)|VR]], [[VX (nerve agent)|VX]], and Novichok agents.
  
Sarin is one of diverse ''nerve agents'' (also referred to as ''nerve gases'', though these chemicals are liquid at room temperature), which are a class of [[phosphorus]]-containing [[organic chemistry|organic chemicals]] ([[organophosphate]]s) that disrupt the mechanism by which nerves transfer messages to organs. The disruption is caused by blocking [[acetylcholinesterase]], an [[enzyme]] that normally relaxes the activity of [[acetylcholine]], a [[neurotransmitter]]. Other nerve agents are ([[tabun (nerve agent)|tabun]], [[soman]], [[cyclosarin]], [[VE (nerve agent)|VE]], [[VG (nerve agent)|VG]], [[VM (nerve agent)|VM]], [[VR (nerve agent)|VR]], [[VX (nerve agent)|VX]], and Novichok agents.
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Sarin is a fluorinated [[phosphonate]] and is similar in structure and has a similar [[mechanism of action]] as some commonly used [[insecticide]]s, such as [[malathion]]. It is similar in biological activity to [[carbamate]]s used as [[insecticide]]s such as [[sevin]], and [[medicine]]s such as [[pyridostigmine]], [[neostigmine]], and [[physostigmine]].
  
Sarin is a fluorinated [[phosphonate]] and is similar in structure and has a similar [[mechanism of action]] as some commonly used [[insecticide]]s, such as [[malathion]]. It is similar in biological activity to [[carbamate]]s used as insecticides such as [[sevin]], and [[medicine]]s such as [[pyridostigmine]], [[neostigmine]], and [[physostigmine]].
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At [[room temperature]], sarin is a colorless, odorless liquid. Its low [[vapor pressure]] (2.9 mmHg at 20°C) makes it relatively ineffective as a terrorist inhalation weapon. Its vapor is also colorless and odorless. It can be made more persistent through the addition of certain oils or petroleum products.
 
 
At room temperature, sarin is a colorless, odorless liquid. Its low [[vapor pressure]] (2.9 mmHg at 20°C) makes it relatively ineffective as a terrorist inhalation weapon. Its vapor is also colorless and odorless. It can be made more persistent through the addition of certain oils or petroleum products.
 
  
 
Sarin can be used as a [[binary chemical weapon]] (a chemical weapon in which the toxic agent is not contained within the weapon in its active state, but in the form of two less toxic chemical precursors, physically separated within the weapon, but which are mixed to make the active agent). Sarin's two precursors are [[methylphosphonyl difluoride]] and a mixture of [[isopropyl alcohol]] and [[isopropylamine]]. The isopropylamine neutralizes the [[hydrogen fluoride]] generated during the chemical reaction.
 
Sarin can be used as a [[binary chemical weapon]] (a chemical weapon in which the toxic agent is not contained within the weapon in its active state, but in the form of two less toxic chemical precursors, physically separated within the weapon, but which are mixed to make the active agent). Sarin's two precursors are [[methylphosphonyl difluoride]] and a mixture of [[isopropyl alcohol]] and [[isopropylamine]]. The isopropylamine neutralizes the [[hydrogen fluoride]] generated during the chemical reaction.
  
===Shelf life===
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===Shelf life and deactivation===
 
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Sarin has a relatively short [[shelf life]], and will degrade after a period of several weeks to several months. The shelf life may be greatly shortened by impurities in precursor materials. According to the [[CIA]] (1996), in 1989, the [[Iraqi Government]] destroyed 40 or more tons of sarin that had decomposed, and that some Iraqi sarin had a shelf life of only a few weeks, owing mostly to impure precursors.
Sarin has a relatively short [[shelf life]], and will degrade after a period of several weeks to several months. The shelf life may be greatly shortened by impurities in precursor materials. According to the [[CIA]],<ref>{{cite web|publisher=United States Central Intelligence Agency|date=July 15, 1996|url=http://www.fas.org/irp/gulf/cia/960715/72569.htm|title=Stability of Iraq's Chemical Weapon Stockpile|accessdate=2007-08-03}}</ref> in 1989 the [[Iraqi Government]] destroyed 40 or more tons of sarin that had decomposed, and that some Iraqi sarin had a shelf life of only a few weeks, owing mostly to impure precursors.
 
 
 
Like other nerve agents, sarin can be chemically deactivated with a strong [[alkali]]. [[Sodium hydroxide]] can be used in a [[hydrolysis]] reaction to destroy sarin, converting it to effectively harmless sodium salts.<ref>{{cite book |last=Housecroft |first=Catherine |coauthors=Sharpe, Alan G |title=Inorganic Chemistry| pages = p317 |year=2001 |isbn=0582-31080-6 }}</ref>
 
 
 
====Efforts to lengthen shelf life====
 
  
Nations stockpiling sarin have tried to overcome the problem of its short shelf life in three ways:
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Nations stockpiling sarin have tried to overcome the problem of its short shelf life in three ways. One way is to lengthen the shelf life of [[unitary]] (pure) sarin by increasing the purity of the precursor and intermediate chemicals and refining the production process. Another way to increase shelf life is by incorporating a stabilizer chemical. Initially used was [[tributylamine]], but later this was replaced by [[diisopropylcarbodiimide]] (DIC), which allowed for sarin to be stored in aluminum casings. Finally, stockpiling of sarin can be improved by developing [[binary chemical weapon]]s, where the two precursor chemicals are stored separately in the same [[Shell (projectile)|shell]], and mixed to form the agent immediately before or when the shell is in flight. This approach has the dual benefit of making the issue of shelf life irrelevant and greatly increasing the safety of sarin munitions. However, experts do not put the shelf life of this type of weapon past 5 years.
  
* The shelf life of [[unitary]] (pure) sarin may be lengthened by increasing the purity of the precursor and intermediate chemicals and refining the production process.
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Like other nerve agents, sarin can be chemically deactivated with a strong [[alkali]]. [[Sodium hydroxide]] can be used in a [[hydrolysis]] reaction to destroy sarin, converting it to effectively harmless sodium salts (Housecroft and Sharpe 2001).
 
 
* Incorporating a stabilizer chemical called [[tributylamine]]. Later this was replaced by [[diisopropylcarbodiimide]] (DIC), which allowed for sarin to be stored in aluminium casings.
 
 
 
* Developing [[binary chemical weapon]]s, where the two precursor chemicals are stored separately in the same [[Shell (projectile)|shell]], and mixed to form the agent immediately before or when the shell is in flight. This approach has the dual benefit of making the issue of shelf life irrelevant and greatly increasing the safety of sarin munitions. However, experts do not put the shelf life of this type of weapon past 5 years.
 
  
 
==Biological effects==
 
==Biological effects==
[[Image:Sarin test rabbit.jpg|thumb|200px|Rabbit used to check for leaks at sarin production plant, [[Rocky Mountain Arsenal]]. (photo 1970)]]
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[[Image:Sarin test rabbit.jpg|thumb|200px|Rabbit used to check for leaks at sarin production plant, [[Rocky Mountain Arsenal]] (photo 1970).]]
Like other nerve agents, sarin attacks the [[nervous system]] of a living organism. It is an extremely potent [[Enzyme inhibitor#Irreversible inhibitors|irreversible]] [[cholinesterase]] [[Enzyme inhibitor|inhibitor]].<ref>{{cite journal| author= Abu-Qare A. W., Abou-Donia M. B.|title= Sarin: health effects, metabolism, and methods of analysis |journal= Food Chem. Tox.|volume= 40|pages= 1327–1333 |year= 2002|doi=10.1016/S0278-6915(02)00079-0}}</ref>
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Like other nerve agents, sarin attacks the [[nervous system]] of a living organism. It is an extremely potent, [[Enzyme inhibitor#Irreversible inhibitors|irreversible]] [[cholinesterase]] [[Enzyme inhibitor|inhibitor]] (Abu-Qare and Abou-Donia 2002).
  
 
When a functioning pre-synaptic [[motor neuron]] or [[Parasympathetic nervous system|parasympathetic neuron]] is stimulated, it releases the [[neurotransmitter]] [[acetylcholine]] to transmit an action potential across the synaptic cleft to an effector muscle or organ. Once the action potential has been sent, the [[enzyme]] [[acetylcholinesterase]] breaks down the acetylcholine in the synaptic cleft in order to allow the effector muscle or organ to relax.
 
When a functioning pre-synaptic [[motor neuron]] or [[Parasympathetic nervous system|parasympathetic neuron]] is stimulated, it releases the [[neurotransmitter]] [[acetylcholine]] to transmit an action potential across the synaptic cleft to an effector muscle or organ. Once the action potential has been sent, the [[enzyme]] [[acetylcholinesterase]] breaks down the acetylcholine in the synaptic cleft in order to allow the effector muscle or organ to relax.
  
Sarin disrupts the nervous system by inhibiting the cholinesterase enzyme by forming a [[covalent bond]] with the particular [[serine]] residue in the enzyme which forms the site where acetylcholine normally undergoes [[hydrolysis]]; the fluorine of the phosphonyl fluoride group reacts with the hydroxyl group on the serine side-chain, forming a [[phosphoester]] and releasing HF.<ref>{{cite web|title=Structure of acetylcholestrinase inhibited by sarin|url=http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/explore/explore.do?structureId=2JGG}}</ref>  With the enzyme inhibited, acetylcholine builds up in the [[synapse]] and continues to act so that any nerve impulses are, in effect, continually transmitted.
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Sarin disrupts the nervous system by inhibiting the cholinesterase enzyme by forming a [[covalent bond]] with the particular [[serine]] residue in the enzyme that forms the site where acetylcholine normally undergoes [[hydrolysis]]. The fluorine of the phosphonyl fluoride group reacts with the hydroxyl group on the serine side-chain, forming a [[phosphoester]] and releasing HF (Hornberg et al. 2007). With the enzyme inhibited, acetylcholine builds up in the [[synapse]] and continues to act so that any nerve impulses are, in effect, continually transmitted.
  
Initial symptoms following exposure to sarin are a runny nose, tightness in the chest and constriction of the [[pupil]]s. Soon after, the victim has difficulty breathing and experiences nausea and drooling. As the victim continues to lose control of bodily functions, the victim vomits, defecates and urinates. This phase is followed by twitching and jerking. Ultimately, the victim becomes comatose and suffocates in a series of convulsive spasms.
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Initial symptoms following exposure to sarin are a runny nose, tightness in the chest, and constriction of the [[pupil]]s. Soon after, the victim has difficulty breathing and experiences nausea and drooling. As the victim continues to lose control of bodily functions, the victim vomits, defecates, and urinates. This phase is followed by twitching and jerking. Ultimately, the victim becomes comatose and suffocates in a series of convulsive spasms.
  
 
Sarin has a high volatility relative to similar nerve agents. Inhalation and absorption through the skin pose a great threat. Even vapor concentrations immediately penetrate the skin. People who absorb a nonlethal dose but do not receive immediate appropriate medical treatment may suffer permanent neurological damage.
 
Sarin has a high volatility relative to similar nerve agents. Inhalation and absorption through the skin pose a great threat. Even vapor concentrations immediately penetrate the skin. People who absorb a nonlethal dose but do not receive immediate appropriate medical treatment may suffer permanent neurological damage.
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Even at very low concentrations, sarin can be fatal. Death may follow in one minute after direct ingestion of about 0.01 milligram per kilogram of body weight if [[antidote]]s, typically [[atropine]] and [[pralidoxime]], are not quickly administered. Atropine, an [[receptor antagonist|antagonist]] to [[muscarinic acetylcholine receptor]]s, is given to treat the physiological symptoms of poisoning. Since muscular response to acetylcholine is mediated through nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, atropine does not counteract the muscular symptoms. Pralidoxime can regenerate cholinesterases if administered within approximately five hours.
 
Even at very low concentrations, sarin can be fatal. Death may follow in one minute after direct ingestion of about 0.01 milligram per kilogram of body weight if [[antidote]]s, typically [[atropine]] and [[pralidoxime]], are not quickly administered. Atropine, an [[receptor antagonist|antagonist]] to [[muscarinic acetylcholine receptor]]s, is given to treat the physiological symptoms of poisoning. Since muscular response to acetylcholine is mediated through nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, atropine does not counteract the muscular symptoms. Pralidoxime can regenerate cholinesterases if administered within approximately five hours.
  
It is estimated that sarin is more than 500 times more toxic than [[cyanide]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Council on Foreign Relations - Sarin|url=http://www.cfr.org/publication/9553/|accessdate=2007-08-13}}</ref>
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It is estimated that sarin is more than 500 times more toxic than [[cyanide]] (CFR 2006).
  
The short- and long-term symptoms experienced by those affected included:
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The short and long-term symptoms experienced by those affected included:
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{{col-begin}}
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{{col-2}}
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*[[Coma]]
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*[[Convulsion]]s
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*[[Death]]
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*[[Difficulty breathing]]
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*Disturbed sleep and [[nightmare]]s
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*[[Photophobia|Extreme sensitivity to light]]
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*Foaming at the mouth
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*High [[fever]]s
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*[[Influenza]]-like symptoms
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{{col-2}}
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*[[Loss of consciousness]]
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*[[Loss of memory]]
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*[[Nausea]] and [[vomiting]]
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*[[Paralysis]]
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*[[Post-traumatic stress disorder]]
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*Respiratory problems
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*[[Seizure]]s
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*Uncontrollable [[trembling]]
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*Vision problems, both temporary and permanent
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{{col-end}}
  
*[[coma]]
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Although [[blood|bleeding]] from the nose and mouth were symptoms seen in the [[Sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway|1995 sarin gas attacks in Tokyo]], this had been attributed to impurities within the sarin used as it is not usually seen (Altman 1995).
*[[convulsion]]s
 
*[[death]]
 
*[[difficulty breathing]]
 
*disturbed sleep and [[nightmare]]s
 
*[[Photophobia|extreme sensitivity to light]]
 
*foaming at the mouth
 
*high [[fever]]s
 
*[[influenza]]-like symptoms
 
*[[loss of consciousness]]
 
*[[loss of memory]]
 
*[[nausea]] and [[vomiting]]
 
*[[paralysis]]
 
*[[post-traumatic stress disorder]]
 
*respiratory problems
 
*[[seizure]]s
 
*uncontrollable [[trembling]]
 
*vision problems, both temporary and permanent
 
 
 
Although [[blood|bleeding]] from the nose and mouth were symptoms seen in the [[Sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway|1995 sarin gas attacks in Tokyo]], this had been attributed to impurities within the sarin used as it is not usually seen.<ref>{{cite web|title=New York Times - Terror in Tokyo|url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990CE0D9103AF932A15750C0A963958260|accessdate=2008-01-30}}</ref>
 
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
{{seealso|Nerve agent#History}}
 
 
Students at the United States Marine Corps' Nuclear, Biological and Chemical Defense School (MOS 5711) at Fort Leonard Wood in Missouri conduct a Mission Oriented Protective Posture (MOPP) chemical protective gear confidence exercise in an environment containing live Sarin (GB) gas, as well as [[VX]] nerve agent. This exercise is carried out inside of the heavily guarded Chemical Defense Training Facility (CDTF).
 
  
 
===Origin===
 
===Origin===
Sarin was discovered in 1938 in [[Wuppertal|Wuppertal-Elberfeld]] in [[Germany]] by two German scientists attempting to create stronger pesticides; it is the most toxic of the four [[Nerve agent#Different nerve agents|G-agents]] made by Germany. The compound, which followed the discovery of the [[nerve agent]] [[tabun (nerve agent)|tabun]], was named in honor of its discoverers: [[Gerhard Schrader|Gerhard '''S'''chrader]], '''A'''mbros, '''R'''üdiger and Van der L'''IN'''de.
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Sarin was discovered in 1938, in [[Wuppertal|Wuppertal-Elberfeld]], [[Germany]], by German scientists who initially were attempting to create stronger pesticides. It was named in honor of its discoverers: [[Gerhard Schrader|Gerhard '''S'''chrader]], '''A'''mbros, '''R'''üdiger, and Van der L'''IN'''de.
  
This first class of nerve agents, the so-called ''G-Series'', was accidentally discovered in [[Germany]] on [[December 23]], [[1936]] by a research team headed by [[Gerhard Schrader|Dr. Gerhard Schrader]]. Since [[1934]], Schrader had been in charge of a laboratory in [[Leverkusen]] to develop new types of [[insecticide]]s for [[IG Farben]]. While working toward his goal of improved insecticide, Schrader experimented with numerous [[fluorine]]-containing compounds, eventually leading to the preparation of [[tabun (nerve agent)|tabun]].  
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The discovery of sarin came on the foundation of the discovery of the [[nerve agent]] [[tabun (nerve agent)|tabun]]. Tabun was accidentally discovered in [[Germany]] on December 23, 1936, by a research team headed by [[Gerhard Schrader|Dr. Gerhard Schrader]]. Since 1934, Schrader had been in charge of a laboratory in [[Leverkusen]] to develop new types of [[insecticide]]s for [[IG Farben]]. While working toward his goal of improved insecticide, Schrader experimented with numerous [[fluorine]]-containing compounds, eventually leading to the preparation of tabun.  
  
In experiments, tabun was extremely potent against insects: as little as 5 [[Parts per million|ppm]] of tabun killed all the leaf lice he used in his initial experiment. In January [[1937]], Schrader observed the effects of nerve agents on human beings first-hand when a drop of tabun spilled onto a lab bench. Within minutes he and his laboratory assistant began to experience [[miosis]] (constriction of the pupils of the eyes), dizziness, and severe shortness of breath. It took them three weeks to recover fully.
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In experiments, tabun was extremely potent against insects: As little as 5 [[Parts per million|ppm]] of tabun killed all the [[leaf lice]] he used in his initial experiment. In January 1937, Schrader observed the effects of nerve agents on human beings first-hand when a drop of tabun spilled onto a lab bench. Within minutes, he and his laboratory assistant began to experience [[miosis]] (constriction of the pupils of the eyes), dizziness, and severe shortness of breath. It took them three weeks to recover fully.
  
In [[1935]] the [[Nazism|Nazi]] government had passed a decree that required all inventions of possible military significance to be reported to the [[Ministry of War]], so in May of [[1937]] Schrader sent a sample of tabun to the [[chemical warfare]] (CW) section of the [[Army Weapons Office]] in [[Berlin-Spandau]]. Dr. Schrader was summoned to the Wehrmacht chemical lab in Berlin to give a demonstration, after which Schrader's patent application and all related research was classified. Colonel Rüdiger, head of the CW section, ordered the construction of new laboratories for the further investigation of tabun and other organophosphate compounds, and Schrader soon moved to a new laboratory at Wuppertal-Elberfeld in the Ruhr valley to continue his research in secret throughout [[World War II]]. The compound was initially codenamed Le-100 and later Trilon-83.
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In 1935, the [[Nazism|Nazi]] government had passed a decree that required all inventions of possible military significance to be reported to the [[Ministry of War]], so in May of 1937, Schrader sent a sample of tabun to the [[chemical warfare]] (CW) section of the [[Army Weapons Office]] in [[Berlin-Spandau]]. Dr. Schrader was summoned to the Wehrmacht chemical lab in Berlin to give a demonstration, after which Schrader's patent application and all related research was classified. Colonel Rüdiger, head of the CW section, ordered the construction of new laboratories for the further investigation of tabun and other organophosphate compounds, and Schrader soon moved to a new laboratory at Wuppertal-Elberfeld in the Ruhr valley to continue his research in secret throughout [[World War II]]. The compound was initially codenamed Le-100 and later Trilon-83.
  
[[Sarin]] was discovered by Schrader and his team in 1938 and named after their initials: Schrader, Ambrose, Rudriger, and van der Linde. It was codenamed T-144 or Trilon-46. It was found to be more than ten times as potent as tabun.
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Sarin was discovered by Schrader and his team in 1938, and named after their initials. It was codenamed T-144 or Trilon-46. It was found to be more than ten times as potent as tabun. Sarin is the most toxic of the four [[Nerve agent#Different nerve agents|G-agents]] made by Nazi Germany.
  
 
===Sarin in Nazi Germany during World War II===
 
===Sarin in Nazi Germany during World War II===
 
 
In mid-1939, the formula for the agent was passed to the [[chemical warfare]] section of the [[German Army Weapons Office]], which ordered that it be brought into mass production for wartime use. A number of pilot plants were built, and a high-production facility was under construction (but was not finished) by the end of [[World War II]]. Estimates for total sarin production by Nazi Germany range from 500 kg to 10 tons.
 
In mid-1939, the formula for the agent was passed to the [[chemical warfare]] section of the [[German Army Weapons Office]], which ordered that it be brought into mass production for wartime use. A number of pilot plants were built, and a high-production facility was under construction (but was not finished) by the end of [[World War II]]. Estimates for total sarin production by Nazi Germany range from 500 kg to 10 tons.
  
Though sarin, [[tabun (nerve agent)|tabun]] and [[soman]] were incorporated into [[artillery]] shells, Germany ultimately decided not to use nerve agents against [[Allies#World War II|Allied]] targets. German [[Intelligence (information gathering)|intelligence]] was unaware that the Allies had not developed similar compounds, but they understood that unleashing these compounds would lead the Allies to develop and use chemical weapons of their own, and they were concerned that the Allies' ability to reach German targets would prove devastating in a chemical war.
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Though sarin, [[tabun (nerve agent)|tabun]], and [[soman]] were incorporated into [[artillery]] shells, Germany ultimately decided not to use nerve agents against [[Allies#World War II|Allied]] targets. German [[Intelligence (information gathering)|intelligence]] was unaware that the Allies had not developed similar compounds, but did speculate that they might have and they also understood that unleashing these compounds would lead the Allies to develop and use chemical weapons of their own. They were concerned that the Allies' ability to reach German targets would prove devastating in a chemical war.
  
 
===Sarin after World War II===
 
===Sarin after World War II===
[[Image:Demonstration cluster bomb.jpg|thumb|U.S. [[Honest John missile]] warhead cutaway, showing M139 Sarin bomblets (c. 1960)]]
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[[Image:Demonstration cluster bomb.jpg|thumb|U.S. [[Honest John missile]] warhead cutaway, showing M139 Sarin bomblets (c. 1960).]]
* 1950s (early): [[NATO]] adopted sarin as a standard chemical weapon, and both the [[U.S.S.R]] and the [[United States]] produced sarin for military purposes.
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The following is a timetable of the development and use of sarin since World War II.
* 1953: 20-year-old [[Ronald Maddison]], a [[Royal Air Force]] engineer from [[Consett]], [[County Durham]], died in human testing of sarin at the [[Porton Down]] chemical warfare testing facility in Wiltshire. Maddison had been told that he was participating in a test to "cure the common cold." Ten days after his death an [[inquest]] was held in secret which returned a verdict of "misadventure." In 2004 the inquest was reopened and, after a 64-day inquest hearing, the jury ruled that Maddison had been unlawfully killed by the "application of a nerve agent in a non-therapeutic experiment."<ref>{{cite news
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* 1950s (early). [[NATO]] adopted sarin as a standard chemical weapon, and both the [[U.S.S.R]] and the [[United States]] produced sarin for military purposes.
|url= http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/wiltshire/4013767.stm
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* 1953. Twenty-year-old [[Ronald Maddison]], a [[Royal Air Force]] engineer from [[Consett]], [[County Durham]], died in human testing of sarin at the [[Porton Down]] chemical warfare testing facility in Wiltshire. Maddison had been told that he was participating in a test to "cure the common cold." Ten days after his death an [[inquest]] was held in secret, which returned a verdict of "misadventure." In 2004, the inquest was reopened and, after a 64-day inquest hearing, the jury ruled that Maddison had been unlawfully killed by the "application of a nerve agent in a non-therapeutic experiment" (BBC 2004).
|publisher=BBC News Online
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* 1956. Regular production of sarin ceased in the United States, though existing stocks of bulk sarin were re-distilled until 1970.
|title=Nerve gas death was 'unlawful'
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* 1960s (developing). Declassified secret documents indicate that the United States unsuccessfully sought Australian permission in the 1960s to test sarin and [[VX (nerve agent)|VX gas]] on 200 "mainly Australian" troops (Ansley 2008).  
|date=November 15, 2004}}</ref>
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* 1978. [[Michael Townley]] in a sworn declaration indicated that sarin was produced by the secret police of [[Chile]]'s [[Augusto Pinochet|Pinochet]] regime [[DINA]], by [[Eugenio Berríos]]. The testimony indicated that it was used to assassinate the state archives custodian [[Renato León Zenteno]] and the Army Corporal [[Manuel Leyton]] (El Mercurio 2006).
* 1956: Regular production of sarin ceased in the United States, though existing stocks of bulk sarin were re-distilled until 1970.
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* 1980–1988. [[Iraq]] used sarin against [[Iran]] during the [[Iran–Iraq War|1980–88 war]]. During the 1990–91 [[Gulf War]], Iraq still had large stockpiles available, which were found as coalition forces advanced north.
* 1960s (developing): The US unsuccessfully sought Australian permission to test Sarin and [[VX (nerve agent)|VX gas]] on 200 "mainly Australian" troops, probably in the [[Iron Range National Park|Iron Range]] rainforest near [[Lockhart River, Queensland]].<ref>Ansley, Greg (2008) [http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10520276 "US planned nerve gas attack on Australian troops"] in ''NZ Herald'', 7 July 2008.</ref>
+
* 1988. Over the span of two days in March, the ethnic [[Kurd]] city of [[Halabja]] in northern Iraq (population 70,000) was bombarded with chemical and cluster bombs, which included sarin, in the [[Halabja poison gas attack]]. An estimated 5,000 people died.
* 1978: [[Michael Townley]] in a sworn declaration indicated that sarin was produced by the secret police of [[Chile]]'s [[Augusto Pinochet|Pinochet]] regime [[DINA]], by [[Eugenio Berríos]], it indicated that it was used to assassinate the state archives custodian [[Renato León Zenteno]] and the Army Corporal [[Manuel Leyton]].<ref name="">{{
+
* 1991. [[UN Resolution 687]] established the term "weapon of mass destruction" and called for the immediate destruction of chemical weapons in Iraq, and eventual destruction of all chemical weapons globally.
cite news
+
* 1993. The [[United Nations]] [[Chemical Weapons Convention]] was signed by 162 member countries, banning the production and stockpiling of many chemical weapons, including sarin. It went into effect on April 29, 1997, and called for the complete destruction of all specified stockpiles of chemical weapons by April 2007 (OPCW 2005).  
|url=http://diario.elmercurio.com/2006/09/19/nacional/nacional/noticias/98567EED-8253-49C6-9D0D-0C91F446EE5B.htm?id={98567EED-8253-49C6-9D0D-0C91F446EE5B}
+
* 1994. The Japanese religious sect [[Aum Shinrikyo]] released an impure form of sarin in [[Matsumoto, Nagano]].  
|publisher=El Mercurio
+
* 1995. [[Aum Shinrikyo]] sect released an impure form of sarin in the [[Tokyo Subway]]. Twelve people died.  
|title=Townley reveló uso de gas sarín antes de ser expulsado de Chile
+
* 1998. ''[[Time Magazine]]'' and [[CNN]] ran news stories alleging that in 1970 [[U.S. Air Force]] [[A-1 Skyraider|A-1E Skyraiders]] engaged in a covert operation called [[Operation Tailwind]], in which they deliberately dropped sarin-containing weapons on U.S. troops who had defected in [[Laos]]. After investigations, both internally and by the Pentagon, CNN and ''Time Magazine'' retracted the stories and fired the producers responsible (CNN 1998).
|date=September 19, 2006
+
* 1999. The 3D crystal structure of sarin complexed with acetylcholinesterase was determined by Millard et al (1999).
}}</ref>
+
* 2004. On May 14, [[Iraqi insurgency]] fighters in [[Iraq]] detonated a 155 mm shell containing several liters of binary precursors for sarin. The shell was designed to mix the chemicals as it spins during flight. The detonated shell released only a small amount of sarin gas, either because the explosion failed to mix the binary agents properly or because the chemicals inside the shell had degraded significantly with age. Two [[USA|United States]] soldiers were treated for exposure after displaying the early symptoms of exposure to sarin (MSNBC 2004).
* 1980–1988: [[Iraq]] used sarin against [[Iran]] during the [[Iran–Iraq War|1980–88 war]]. During the 1990–91 [[Gulf War]], Iraq still had large stockpiles available which were found as coalition forces advanced north.{{Fact|date=November 2007}}
+
 
* 1988: Over the span of two days in March, the ethnic [[Kurd]] city of [[Halabja]] in northern Iraq (population 70,000) was bombarded with chemical and cluster bombs, which included sarin, in the [[Halabja poison gas attack]]. An estimated 5,000 people died.
+
==Notes==
* 1991: [[UN Resolution 687]] established the term "weapon of mass destruction" and called for the immediate destruction of chemical weapons in Iraq, and eventual destruction of all chemical weapons globally.<ref>[http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/United_Nations_Security_Council_Resolution_687 United Nations Security Council Resolution 687], full text at wikisource.org</ref>
+
<references/>
* 1993: The [[United Nations]] [[Chemical Weapons Convention]] was signed by 162 member countries, banning the production and stockpiling of many chemical weapons, including sarin. It went into effect on 29 April 1997, and called for the complete destruction of all specified stockpiles of chemical weapons by April 2007.<ref>[http://www.opcw.org/html/db/cwc/eng/cwc_frameset.html Chemical Weapons Convention<!-- Bot generated title —>]</ref>
 
* 1994: The Japanese religious sect [[Aum Shinrikyo]] released an impure form of sarin in [[Matsumoto, Nagano]]. (see [[Matsumoto incident]])
 
* 1995: [[Aum Shinrikyo]] sect released an impure form of sarin in the [[Tokyo Subway]]. Twelve people died. (see [[Sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway]])
 
* 1998: ''[[Time Magazine]]'' and [[CNN]] ran news stories alleging that in 1970 [[U.S. Air Force]] [[A-1 Skyraider|A-1E Skyraiders]] engaged in a covert operation called [[Operation Tailwind]], in which they deliberately dropped sarin-containing weapons on U.S. troops who had defected in [[Laos]]. After investigations both internally and by the Pentagon, CNN and ''Time Magazine'' retracted the stories and fired the producers responsible.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.cnn.com/US/9807/21/pentagon.tailwind.02/|publisher=CNN|title=Cohen: No nerve gas used in Operation Tailwind|date=July 21, 1998|accessdate=2007-08-03}}</ref>
 
* 1999: The 3D crystal structure of sarin complexed with acetylcholinesterase was determined by Millard et al (1999)|<ref>PMID 10353814</ref>, and can be seen at {{Proteopedia|1cfj}}.
 
* 2004: On May 14 [[Iraqi insurgency]] fighters in [[Iraq]] detonated a 155 mm shell containing several litres of binary precursors for sarin. The shell was designed to mix the chemicals as it spins during flight. The detonated shell released only a small amount of sarin gas, either because the explosion failed to mix the binary agents properly or because the chemicals inside the shell had degraded significantly with age. Two [[USA|United States]] soldiers were treated for exposure after displaying the early symptoms of exposure to sarin.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4997808/|title=Bomb said to hold deadly sarin gas explodes in Iraq|date=May 17, 2004|accessdate=2007-08-03|publisher=MSNBC}}</ref>
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
{{reflist|2}}
+
* Abu-Qare, A.W., and M.B. Abou-Donia. 2002. [http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6T6P-45D13P1-7&_user=10&_rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_sort=d&view=c&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=10&md5=efc0633ca1b9a1f9a0fff306042d6175 Sarin: Health effects, metabolism, and methods of analysis.] ''Food Chem. Tox.'' 40: 1327–1333.
 
+
* Altman, L.K. 1995. [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990CE0D9103AF932A15750C0A963958260 Terror in Tokyo: The poison. Nerve gas that felled Tokyo subway riders said to be one of most lethal known.] ''New York Times'' March 21, 1995. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
==External links==
+
* Ansley, G. 2008. [http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/2/story.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10520276 US planned nerve gas attack on Australian troops.] ''NZ Herald'' July 7, 2008. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
*[http://www.gulfweb.org/bigdoc/report/appgb.html Material Safety Data Sheet]
+
* BBC. 2004. [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/wiltshire/4013767.stm Nerve gas death was "unlawful."] ''BBC News Online'' November 15, 2004. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
*[http://cfrterrorism.org/weapons/sarin.html Questions and Answers for Sarin]
+
* Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), United States. 1996. [http://www.fas.org/irp/gulf/cia/960715/72569.htm Stability of Iraq's chemical weapon stockpile.] ''United States Central Intelligence Agency''. Retrieved August 16, 2008. 
*[http://www.fas.org/irp/gulf/cia/960715/72569.htm CIA memo: The Stability of Iraq's Chemical Weapons Stockpile]
+
* CNN. 1998. [http://www.cnn.com/US/9807/21/pentagon.tailwind.02 Cohen: No nerve gas used in Operation Tailwind.] ''CNN'' July 21, 1998. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
*[http://cbw.sipri.se/docu/cw-agents/sarin.html Stockholm International Peace Research Institute entry on sarin]
+
* Council on Foreign Relations (CFR). 2006. [http://www.cfr.org/publication/9553/ Sarin.] ''Council on Foreign Relation''. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
 +
* ''El Mercurio''. 2006. Townley reveló uso de gas sarín antes de ser expulsado de Chile. ''El Mercurio'' September 19, 2006.
 +
* Hornberg, A., A.-K. Tunemalm, and F. Ekstrom. 2007. [http://www.rcsb.org/pdb/explore/explore.do?structureId=2JGG Crystal structures of acetylcholinesterase in complex with organophosphorus compounds suggest that the acyl pocket modulates the aging reaction by precluding the formation of the trigonal bipyramidal transition state.] ''Protein Data Bank''. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
 +
* Housecroft, C., and A.G. Sharpe. 2001. ''Inorganic Chemistry''. New York: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0582310806.
 +
* Millard, C. B., G. Kryger, A. Ordentlich, H.M. Greenblatt, M. Harel, M.L. Raves, Y. Segall, D. Barak, A. Shafferman, I. Silman, and J.L. Sussman. 1999. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10353814 Crystal structures of aged phosphonylated acetylcholinesterase: nerve agent reaction products at the atomic level.] ''Biochemistry'' 38(22): 7032-9. PMID 10353814. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
 +
* MSNBC. 2004. [http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4997808 Bomb said to hold deadly sarin gas explodes in Iraq.] ''MSNBC'' May 17, 2004. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
 +
* Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW). 2005. [http://www.opcw.org/html/db/cwc/eng/cwc_frameset.html ''Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons and on their Destruction.''] ''Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons''. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
  
 
{{Chemical warfare}}
 
{{Chemical warfare}}

Latest revision as of 15:49, 20 August 2008


Sarin[1]
Sarin-2D-skeletal.png Sarin-3D-balls.png
IUPAC name 2-(Fluoro-methylphosphoryl)oxypropane
Other names O-isopropyl methylphosphonofluoridate
GB
Identifiers
CAS number [107-44-8]
PubChem 7871
SMILES CC(C)OP(=O)(C)F
InChI InChI=1/C4H10FO2P/c1-4
(2)7-8(3,5)6/h4H,1-3H3
Properties
Molecular formula C4H10FO2P
Molar mass 140.09 g/mol
Appearance Clear colorless liquid. Odorless in pure form.
Density 1.0887 g/cm³ at 25 °C
1.102 g/cm³ at 20 °C
Melting point

-56 °C

Boiling point

158 °C

Solubility in water miscible
Hazards
NFPA 704

NFPA 704.svg

1
4
1
 
Except where noted otherwise, data are given for
materials in their standard state
(at 25 °C, 100 kPa)

Sarin is a phosphorus-containing organic chemical, C4H10FO2P, that is extremely toxic to human beings and is used as a nerve agent, attacking the nervous system by irreversibly inhibiting cholinesterase. It is a colorless and odorless liquid at room temperature but is highly volatile, with the colorless and odorless gas used as a chemical weapon. Chemically known as 2-(Fluoro-methylphosphoryl)oxypropane or O-isopropyl methylphosphonofluoridate, sarin also is known by its NATO designation of GB.

Sarin is classified as a weapon of mass destruction by the United Nations in UN Resolution 687. It was developed by Nazi Germany during World War II and adopted by NATO in the early 1950s as a standard chemical weapon, with both the USSR and the United States producing it at that time for military purposes. More recently, sarin was used by Iraq against Iran in the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988); used by Saddam Hussein, in 1988, against the Iraqi Kurdish town of Halabja, killing an estimated 5,000 people; used in 1995, by a Japanese religious sect, Aum ShinriKyo, killing twelve people and injuring thousands in a Tokyo subway; and used ineffectively, in 2004, by Iraqi insurgents against U.S. troops when the insurgents detonated a shell with sarin precursors. Production and stockpiling of sarin was outlawed by the Chemical Weapons Convention of 1993; the Chemical Weapons Convention officially took effect on April 29, 1997.

Chemical characteristics

Sarin is one of diverse nerve agents (also referred to as nerve gases, though these chemicals are liquid at room temperature), which are a class of phosphorus-containing organic chemicals (organophosphates) that disrupt the mechanism by which nerves transfer messages to organs. The disruption is caused by blocking acetylcholinesterase, an enzyme that normally relaxes the activity of acetylcholine, a neurotransmitter. Other nerve agents are (tabun, soman, cyclosarin, VE, VG, VM, VR, VX, and Novichok agents.

Sarin is a fluorinated phosphonate and is similar in structure and has a similar mechanism of action as some commonly used insecticides, such as malathion. It is similar in biological activity to carbamates used as insecticides such as sevin, and medicines such as pyridostigmine, neostigmine, and physostigmine.

At room temperature, sarin is a colorless, odorless liquid. Its low vapor pressure (2.9 mmHg at 20°C) makes it relatively ineffective as a terrorist inhalation weapon. Its vapor is also colorless and odorless. It can be made more persistent through the addition of certain oils or petroleum products.

Sarin can be used as a binary chemical weapon (a chemical weapon in which the toxic agent is not contained within the weapon in its active state, but in the form of two less toxic chemical precursors, physically separated within the weapon, but which are mixed to make the active agent). Sarin's two precursors are methylphosphonyl difluoride and a mixture of isopropyl alcohol and isopropylamine. The isopropylamine neutralizes the hydrogen fluoride generated during the chemical reaction.

Shelf life and deactivation

Sarin has a relatively short shelf life, and will degrade after a period of several weeks to several months. The shelf life may be greatly shortened by impurities in precursor materials. According to the CIA (1996), in 1989, the Iraqi Government destroyed 40 or more tons of sarin that had decomposed, and that some Iraqi sarin had a shelf life of only a few weeks, owing mostly to impure precursors.

Nations stockpiling sarin have tried to overcome the problem of its short shelf life in three ways. One way is to lengthen the shelf life of unitary (pure) sarin by increasing the purity of the precursor and intermediate chemicals and refining the production process. Another way to increase shelf life is by incorporating a stabilizer chemical. Initially used was tributylamine, but later this was replaced by diisopropylcarbodiimide (DIC), which allowed for sarin to be stored in aluminum casings. Finally, stockpiling of sarin can be improved by developing binary chemical weapons, where the two precursor chemicals are stored separately in the same shell, and mixed to form the agent immediately before or when the shell is in flight. This approach has the dual benefit of making the issue of shelf life irrelevant and greatly increasing the safety of sarin munitions. However, experts do not put the shelf life of this type of weapon past 5 years.

Like other nerve agents, sarin can be chemically deactivated with a strong alkali. Sodium hydroxide can be used in a hydrolysis reaction to destroy sarin, converting it to effectively harmless sodium salts (Housecroft and Sharpe 2001).

Biological effects

Rabbit used to check for leaks at sarin production plant, Rocky Mountain Arsenal (photo 1970).

Like other nerve agents, sarin attacks the nervous system of a living organism. It is an extremely potent, irreversible cholinesterase inhibitor (Abu-Qare and Abou-Donia 2002).

When a functioning pre-synaptic motor neuron or parasympathetic neuron is stimulated, it releases the neurotransmitter acetylcholine to transmit an action potential across the synaptic cleft to an effector muscle or organ. Once the action potential has been sent, the enzyme acetylcholinesterase breaks down the acetylcholine in the synaptic cleft in order to allow the effector muscle or organ to relax.

Sarin disrupts the nervous system by inhibiting the cholinesterase enzyme by forming a covalent bond with the particular serine residue in the enzyme that forms the site where acetylcholine normally undergoes hydrolysis. The fluorine of the phosphonyl fluoride group reacts with the hydroxyl group on the serine side-chain, forming a phosphoester and releasing HF (Hornberg et al. 2007). With the enzyme inhibited, acetylcholine builds up in the synapse and continues to act so that any nerve impulses are, in effect, continually transmitted.

Initial symptoms following exposure to sarin are a runny nose, tightness in the chest, and constriction of the pupils. Soon after, the victim has difficulty breathing and experiences nausea and drooling. As the victim continues to lose control of bodily functions, the victim vomits, defecates, and urinates. This phase is followed by twitching and jerking. Ultimately, the victim becomes comatose and suffocates in a series of convulsive spasms.

Sarin has a high volatility relative to similar nerve agents. Inhalation and absorption through the skin pose a great threat. Even vapor concentrations immediately penetrate the skin. People who absorb a nonlethal dose but do not receive immediate appropriate medical treatment may suffer permanent neurological damage.

Even at very low concentrations, sarin can be fatal. Death may follow in one minute after direct ingestion of about 0.01 milligram per kilogram of body weight if antidotes, typically atropine and pralidoxime, are not quickly administered. Atropine, an antagonist to muscarinic acetylcholine receptors, is given to treat the physiological symptoms of poisoning. Since muscular response to acetylcholine is mediated through nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, atropine does not counteract the muscular symptoms. Pralidoxime can regenerate cholinesterases if administered within approximately five hours.

It is estimated that sarin is more than 500 times more toxic than cyanide (CFR 2006).

The short and long-term symptoms experienced by those affected included:

  • Coma
  • Convulsions
  • Death
  • Difficulty breathing
  • Disturbed sleep and nightmares
  • Extreme sensitivity to light
  • Foaming at the mouth
  • High fevers
  • Influenza-like symptoms

  • Loss of consciousness
  • Loss of memory
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Paralysis
  • Post-traumatic stress disorder
  • Respiratory problems
  • Seizures
  • Uncontrollable trembling
  • Vision problems, both temporary and permanent

Although bleeding from the nose and mouth were symptoms seen in the 1995 sarin gas attacks in Tokyo, this had been attributed to impurities within the sarin used as it is not usually seen (Altman 1995).

History

Origin

Sarin was discovered in 1938, in Wuppertal-Elberfeld, Germany, by German scientists who initially were attempting to create stronger pesticides. It was named in honor of its discoverers: Gerhard Schrader, Ambros, Rüdiger, and Van der LINde.

The discovery of sarin came on the foundation of the discovery of the nerve agent tabun. Tabun was accidentally discovered in Germany on December 23, 1936, by a research team headed by Dr. Gerhard Schrader. Since 1934, Schrader had been in charge of a laboratory in Leverkusen to develop new types of insecticides for IG Farben. While working toward his goal of improved insecticide, Schrader experimented with numerous fluorine-containing compounds, eventually leading to the preparation of tabun.

In experiments, tabun was extremely potent against insects: As little as 5 ppm of tabun killed all the leaf lice he used in his initial experiment. In January 1937, Schrader observed the effects of nerve agents on human beings first-hand when a drop of tabun spilled onto a lab bench. Within minutes, he and his laboratory assistant began to experience miosis (constriction of the pupils of the eyes), dizziness, and severe shortness of breath. It took them three weeks to recover fully.

In 1935, the Nazi government had passed a decree that required all inventions of possible military significance to be reported to the Ministry of War, so in May of 1937, Schrader sent a sample of tabun to the chemical warfare (CW) section of the Army Weapons Office in Berlin-Spandau. Dr. Schrader was summoned to the Wehrmacht chemical lab in Berlin to give a demonstration, after which Schrader's patent application and all related research was classified. Colonel Rüdiger, head of the CW section, ordered the construction of new laboratories for the further investigation of tabun and other organophosphate compounds, and Schrader soon moved to a new laboratory at Wuppertal-Elberfeld in the Ruhr valley to continue his research in secret throughout World War II. The compound was initially codenamed Le-100 and later Trilon-83.

Sarin was discovered by Schrader and his team in 1938, and named after their initials. It was codenamed T-144 or Trilon-46. It was found to be more than ten times as potent as tabun. Sarin is the most toxic of the four G-agents made by Nazi Germany.

Sarin in Nazi Germany during World War II

In mid-1939, the formula for the agent was passed to the chemical warfare section of the German Army Weapons Office, which ordered that it be brought into mass production for wartime use. A number of pilot plants were built, and a high-production facility was under construction (but was not finished) by the end of World War II. Estimates for total sarin production by Nazi Germany range from 500 kg to 10 tons.

Though sarin, tabun, and soman were incorporated into artillery shells, Germany ultimately decided not to use nerve agents against Allied targets. German intelligence was unaware that the Allies had not developed similar compounds, but did speculate that they might have and they also understood that unleashing these compounds would lead the Allies to develop and use chemical weapons of their own. They were concerned that the Allies' ability to reach German targets would prove devastating in a chemical war.

Sarin after World War II

U.S. Honest John missile warhead cutaway, showing M139 Sarin bomblets (c. 1960).

The following is a timetable of the development and use of sarin since World War II.

  • 1950s (early). NATO adopted sarin as a standard chemical weapon, and both the U.S.S.R and the United States produced sarin for military purposes.
  • 1953. Twenty-year-old Ronald Maddison, a Royal Air Force engineer from Consett, County Durham, died in human testing of sarin at the Porton Down chemical warfare testing facility in Wiltshire. Maddison had been told that he was participating in a test to "cure the common cold." Ten days after his death an inquest was held in secret, which returned a verdict of "misadventure." In 2004, the inquest was reopened and, after a 64-day inquest hearing, the jury ruled that Maddison had been unlawfully killed by the "application of a nerve agent in a non-therapeutic experiment" (BBC 2004).
  • 1956. Regular production of sarin ceased in the United States, though existing stocks of bulk sarin were re-distilled until 1970.
  • 1960s (developing). Declassified secret documents indicate that the United States unsuccessfully sought Australian permission in the 1960s to test sarin and VX gas on 200 "mainly Australian" troops (Ansley 2008).
  • 1978. Michael Townley in a sworn declaration indicated that sarin was produced by the secret police of Chile's Pinochet regime DINA, by Eugenio Berríos. The testimony indicated that it was used to assassinate the state archives custodian Renato León Zenteno and the Army Corporal Manuel Leyton (El Mercurio 2006).
  • 1980–1988. Iraq used sarin against Iran during the 1980–88 war. During the 1990–91 Gulf War, Iraq still had large stockpiles available, which were found as coalition forces advanced north.
  • 1988. Over the span of two days in March, the ethnic Kurd city of Halabja in northern Iraq (population 70,000) was bombarded with chemical and cluster bombs, which included sarin, in the Halabja poison gas attack. An estimated 5,000 people died.
  • 1991. UN Resolution 687 established the term "weapon of mass destruction" and called for the immediate destruction of chemical weapons in Iraq, and eventual destruction of all chemical weapons globally.
  • 1993. The United Nations Chemical Weapons Convention was signed by 162 member countries, banning the production and stockpiling of many chemical weapons, including sarin. It went into effect on April 29, 1997, and called for the complete destruction of all specified stockpiles of chemical weapons by April 2007 (OPCW 2005).
  • 1994. The Japanese religious sect Aum Shinrikyo released an impure form of sarin in Matsumoto, Nagano.
  • 1995. Aum Shinrikyo sect released an impure form of sarin in the Tokyo Subway. Twelve people died.
  • 1998. Time Magazine and CNN ran news stories alleging that in 1970 U.S. Air Force A-1E Skyraiders engaged in a covert operation called Operation Tailwind, in which they deliberately dropped sarin-containing weapons on U.S. troops who had defected in Laos. After investigations, both internally and by the Pentagon, CNN and Time Magazine retracted the stories and fired the producers responsible (CNN 1998).
  • 1999. The 3D crystal structure of sarin complexed with acetylcholinesterase was determined by Millard et al (1999).
  • 2004. On May 14, Iraqi insurgency fighters in Iraq detonated a 155 mm shell containing several liters of binary precursors for sarin. The shell was designed to mix the chemicals as it spins during flight. The detonated shell released only a small amount of sarin gas, either because the explosion failed to mix the binary agents properly or because the chemicals inside the shell had degraded significantly with age. Two United States soldiers were treated for exposure after displaying the early symptoms of exposure to sarin (MSNBC 2004).

Notes

  1. United States Senate, 103d Congress, 2d Session, 1994 (May 25), Material safety data sheet: Lethal nerve agent sarin (GB), Gulf War Veteran Resource Pages. Retrieved August 16, 2008.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

WMD-chemical.svg
Agents of Chemical Warfare
Blood agents: Cyanogen chloride (CK) – Hydrogen cyanide (AC)
Blister agents: Lewisite (L) – Sulfur mustard gas (HD, H, HT, HL, HQ) – Nitrogen mustard gas (HN1, HN2, HN3)
Nerve agents: G-Agents: Tabun (GA) – Sarin (GB) – Soman (GD) – Cyclosarin (GF) | V-Agents: VE – VG – VM – VX
Pulmonary agents: Chlorine – Chloropicrin (PS) – Phosgene (CG) – Diphosgene (DP)
Incapacitating agents: Agent 15 (BZ) – KOLOKOL-1
Riot control agents: Pepper spray (OC) – CS gas – CN gas (mace) – CR gas


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