Hydrogen cyanide (HCN)
- Hydrogen cyanide (HCN) is widely used as an industrial chemical in the production of synthetic fibres, plastics and nitrites and as fumigant and rodenticide. It is released by the combustion of nitrogen containing plastics. It is an extremely toxic compound, rapidly producing symptoms, including headache, loss of consciousness, cardiac arrest and death.
- Exposure
is typically by inhalation of HCN vapour. Ingestion and absorption do not
occur unless individuals are in contact with HCN liquid or contaminated
water. Liquid is also rapidly absorbed across the skin.
- Although cyanide salts are toxic, most inhalation poisoning results from exposure to HCN. Other cyanide compounds may also produce cyanide poisoning and some may be intensely irrigating.
- Cyanide (inorganic) compounds refer to a group of substances containing the cyanide ion (CN-). CN- forms strong complexes with metals such as cobalt, gold, iron and silver and weaker complexes with metals such as zinc. It is because of these properties that cyanide is used extensively within precious and base metal extraction and concentration.
- CN-
complexes are found in nature in some plants, blue green algae, bacteria
and fungi.
- Cyanide salts are odorless when dry, however, when damp they may have a slight odor of hydrogen cyanide. Cyanide gas is highly flammable and in liquid form is both very volatile and flammable. Exposure of cyanides to strong oxidizers such as nitrates and chlorates may cause fires and explosions.
- Cyanide compounds include cyanide salts, such as sodium cyanide (NaCN), potassium cyanide (KCN) and calcium cyanide (CaCN) and the gas hydrogen cyanide (HCN) also known as hydrocyanic gas or prussic acid.
- Hydrogen cyanide (CAS# 74-90-8) is a colourless or pale blue liquid or gas.
- Hydrogen cyanide may be synthesized directly from ammonia and carbon monoxide or from ammonia, oxygen (or air) and natural gas.
- It may also be prepared by reacting a cyanide salt with a strong acid, e.g. sulfuric acid or by thermal decomposition of formamide. Because impure hydrogen cyanide can undergo spontaneous explosive polymerization and decomposition, a small amount of stabilizer (usually phosphoric acid) is added to it.
CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF HCN
At
normal temperature and pressure, HCN is a volatile, colourless gas or a
yellow brown liquid. It has a boiling point of 260 C and its
melting point is –13.4 0C. It is less dense than air and
therefore, dispersed rapidly.
- It
is a liquid at below 2 degrees C.
- Some
people can detect a distinct odour of bitter almonds at concentrations
between 0.6 to 4.4 ppm. The ability to detect the odour, however, is
genetically determined and many people are unable to detect its presence.
- Potassium,
sodium and calcium cyanides are white, deliquescent, non-combustible
solids with faint bitter almond odour.
- Water
solutions of hydrogen cyanide containing sulfuric acid as a stabilizer
severely corrode steel above 40 0C.
- Liquid
hydrogen cyanide will attack some forms of plastics, rubber and coatings.
- Hydrogen
cyanide is miscible with water and alcohol and slightly soluble in ether.
It is incompatible or reactive with amines, acids, sodium hydroxide,
calcium hydroxide, sodium carbonate, caustics and ammonia. It is intensely
poisonous even when mixed with air and is highly toxic to all species in
water.
- Synonyms
are hydrocyanic acid, prussic acid, aero liquid HCN, carbon hydride nitride,
formic anammonide and formonitrile.
Cyanides are not persistent
in water or soil. Cyanides may accumulate in bottom sediments, but residues are
generally as low as <1mg/kg even near polluting sources. Majority of an
accidental release of cyanide is volatilized to the atmosphere where it is
quickly diluted and degraded by ultra violet. Other factors, such as biological
oxidation, precipitation and the effects of sunlight also contribute to cyanide
degradation. There is no evidence of bioaccumulation in the food chain and
hence, secondary poisoning does not occur.
Cyanides
enter air, water and soil as a result of both natural processes and human
industrial activities. In air, cyanide is present mainly as gaseous hydrogen
cyanide. A small amount of cyanide in air is present as fine dust particles.
This dust eventually settles over land and water. Rain helps remove cyanide
particles from air. The gaseous hydrogen cyanide is not easily removed from the
air by settling or rain. The half-life of hydrogen cyanide in the atmosphere is
about 1 to 3 years. Most cyanide in surface
water will form hydrogen cyanide and evaporate. Some cyanide in water will be
transformed into less harmful chemicals by microorganisms or will form a
complex with metals, such as iron. The half-life of cyanide in water is not
known. Cyanide in water does not build up in the bodies of fish.
Cyanide
in soil can form hydrogen cyanide and evaporate. Some of the cyanide will be
transformed into other chemical forms by microorganisms in soil. Some forms of
cyanide remain in soil, but cyanide usually does not seep into underground
water. However, cyanide has been detected in underground waters of a few
landfills. At the high concentrations found in some landfill leachates (water
that seeps through landfill soil), cyanide becomes toxic to soil
microorganisms. Since these microorganisms can no longer change cyanide to
other chemical forms, cyanide is able to pass through soil to underground
water. Less is known about what happens to thiocyanates when they enter the
environment. In soil and water, thiocyanates are changed into other chemical
forms by microorganisms. At near normal temperatures (300C), evaporation
or sorption (binding to soil) does not seem to be important for thiocyanates in
soil.
CYANIDE USE
The
predominant users of cyanide are the steel, electroplating, mining and chemical
industries. The principal cyanide compounds used in industrial operations are
potassium and sodium cyanide and calcium cyanide, particularly in metal
leaching operations. Cyanides have well established uses as insecticides and
fumigants; in the extraction of gold and silver ores; in metal cleaning; in the
manufacture of synthetic fibers, various plastics, dyes, pigments and nylon;
and as reagents in analytical chemistry. Cyanogen has been used as a
high-energy fuel in the chemical industry and as a rocket or missile
propellant; cyanogens and its halides are used in organic synthesis, as
pesticides and fumigants, and in gold-extraction processes.
As
a commercially available product, hydrogen cyanide is sold as a gas and is also
available as a technical grade liquid in concentrations of 5, 10 and 96-99.5%.
Almost all grades of hydrogen cyanide contain a stabilizer such as phosphoric
acid to prevent decomposition and explosion.
Cyanide
salts have various uses. The most significant applications of compounds
included in this profile are uses in electroplating and metal treatment, as an
anti-caking agent in road salts and in gold and silver extraction from ores.
Minor applications include use as insecticides and rodenticides, as chelating
agents and in the manufacture of dyes and pigments. Calcium cyanide is used as a
cement stabilizer and has had limited use in rodent control and as a beehive
fumigant. Formerly used as a polymerization catalyst and as an antifouling agent in marine paints, copper (1) cyanide
continues to be used in plating baths for silver, brass and copper-tin alloy
plating. Many metal polishes contain potassium or sodium cyanide. Potassium
cyanide has a primary use in silver plating and is also used as a reagent in
analytical chemistry. Potassium and sodium cyanide are used in combination for
nitriding steel. One method of achieving hardened, weather-resistant metal
surfaces uses a process known as cyaniding which involves heating the metal in
a liquid solution of sodium cyanide, sodium chloride and sodium carbonate in
the presence of atmospheric oxygen. Fumigation of fruit trees, railway cars and
warehouses and treatment of rabbit and rat burrows and termite nests are
included among the former uses for sodium cyanide.
HOW CYANIDE IS USED?
Cyanide
combines with many organic and inorganic compounds. Because of its unique
properties, cyanide is used in the manufacture of metal parts and numerous
common organic products. About 1.4 million tonnes of HCN are produced annually
worldwide, of which only about 20% is converted into sodium cyanide and mainly used
in the extraction of precious metals such as gold, silver and others. The
remaining 80% of the HCN is used in electroplating, metallurgy and in the
production of a wide range of chemicals such as plastics, cosmetics, paints,
pharmaceuticals, rocket propellant and others.
HOW IS CYANIDE USED IN MINING?
Cyanide
is one of only a few chemical reagents that dissolve gold in water. It is a
common industrial chemical that is readily available at a reasonably low cost.
For both technical and economic reason, cyanide is the chemical of choice for
the recovery of gold from ores. In gold mining, a dilute cyanide solution is
sprayed on crushed ore that is placed in piles, commonly called heaps or mixed
with ore in enclosed vats. The cyanide attaches to minute particles of gold to
form a water-soluble, gold-cyanide compound from which the gold can later be
recovered.
Cyanide
is used in a similar manner to extract silver from ores. In the extraction of
non-precious metals such as copper, nickel, cobalt and molybdenum, cyanide is
used in the milling and concentration processes to separate the desirable
metals from the wastes. Consequently, cyanide and related compounds often are
contained in mine tailings.
CYANIDE EMISSIONS FROM MINING
1)
Hydrogen cyanide emissions to air
Cyanide
emissions to air in the mining industry mainly result from the use of sodium
cyanide in precious and base metals extraction. Cyanide may be released from
process tanks and storage areas or from tailings waste streams and storage
areas. Emitted cyanide is almost exclusively in the form of HCN.
The
rate of HCN release (volatilization) from cyanide solutions is largely governed
by the pH of the solution. The lower the pH, the greater the rate of HCN
evolution.
The environmental hazards posed by emissions of HCN to
air from mineral extraction are considered to be low for the following reasons:
·
Cyanide
is not persistent in the environment but is degraded via oxidation to elemental
nitrogen, carbon monoxide and oxides of nitrogen.
·
Ambient
HCN levels around tailings storage facilities and above leach and adsorption
tanks are monitored regularly and are typically less than 1 ppm at distances of
1 m or more from the source.
·
HCN
is lighter than air so it tends to disperse rapidly into the upper atmosphere.
Seepage of tailings solutions from
active tailings storage areas represents the most common form of release of
cyanide (inorganic) compounds to land from mining facilities. Tailings are
waste slurries produced from mineral extraction processing.Concentrations
of cyanide in seepage water are generally low, usually only a few parts per
million. Analysis of seepage water compared with input solution typically shows
far lower concentrations in seepage water reflecting strong retention of
cyanide within the tailings.Emissions of
cyanide to land in seepage water are reported as total cyanide but in reality
it is only the weak acid dissociable (WAD) and free forms of cyanide that have
any real environmental consequence. These can often make up only a small
percentage of total cyanide.Cyanide
recycling, destruction and neutralization are employed to ensure that cyanide
levels in tailings are minimized.
CYANIDE REMEDIATION
Various
procedures exist for treating cyanide and are comprised of several physical,
adsorption, complexation and/or oxidation methods. These methods predominantly
involve separation or destruction processes and may occur naturally. Separation
processes include the physical, adsorption and complexation methods that are
used to concentrate and thereby recover cyanide for recycling. On the other
hand, destruction processes are used to severe the carbon-nitrogen triple bond
thereby destroying the cyanide and producing non-toxic or less-toxic species.
1) Physical methods
Physical
methods for cyanide treatment can be accomplished using dilution, membranes, electrowinning and hydrolysis/distillation.
· Dilution
Dilution is the only treatment
method, which does not separate or destroy cyanide. This method involves
combining a toxic cyanide waste with an effluent that is low in or free of
cyanide to yield a wastewater below discharge limits. Consequently, dilution is
simple and cheap and is often used as a stand-alone or back-up method to insure
that discharge limits are satisfied. Dilution is usually considered to be
unacceptable since the total amount of cyanide discharge is not altered and
since naturally occurring processes such as adsorption and precipitation can
attenuate and thereby concentrate the cyanide in ground and surface waters.
· Membranes
Cyanide can be separated from
water using membranes with either electrodialysis or reverse osmosis. In
electrodialysis, a potential is applied across two electrodes separated by a
membrane permeable to cyanide. The cyanide solution requiring purification is
placed in the half-cell containing the cathode or negative electrode. Cyanide,
because it is negatively charged, will diffuse through the membrane and
concentrate in the half-cell containing the anode or positive electrode. In
reverse osmosis, pressure is applied to a cyanide solution needing treatment
but, in this case, water is forced through a membrane impermeable to cyanide.
Both of these methods have been shown to be applicable to solutions containing
free and metal complexed cyanide.
· Electrowinning
Strong acid dissociable (SADs) and
WADs can be reduced to corresponding metals by applying a potential across two
electrodes immersed in the same solution:
M(CN)xy-x + ye- à M + xCN- (1)
Thiocyanate does not respond. Free
cyanide is liberated which makes solutions more amenable to other recovery and
remediation processes. Because this electrowinning reaction involves the
reduction of an anion at the cathode, a negatively charged electrode, metal
recoveries and current efficiencies are low. This is compensated for by using
steel wools as high surface area cathodes, increasing agitation to further
increase mass transport, increasing solution temperatures, using appropriate
solution pHs and conductivities, increasing metal concentrations if possible
and redesigning the electrowinning cell of which four designs have been
developed for gold processing. Furthermore, reaction (1) must be accompanied by
a corresponding oxidation reaction, usually oxygen evolution, at the anode with
an equivalent number of electrons, e-, being donated:
Y/4.[4OH- à 2H2O + O2 + 4e- ] (2a)
Y/4.[2H2O à 4H+ + O2 + 4e- ] (2b)
Electrowinning is predominantly
used for gold processing. Electrowinning performs well in concentrated
solutions; at dilute concentrations, hydrogen evolution predominates, possibly
masking Reaction 1 completely:
2H+
+ 2e- à H2(g) (3)
Progress is continuing to make
electrowinning technology economically viable to dilute solutions. Direct
applications to cyanide remediation may then be possible.
· Hydrolysis/distillation
Free cyanide naturally hydrolyzes
in water to produce aqueous hydrogen cyanide:
CN-
+ H+ à HCN (aq) (4)
The aqueous hydrogen cyanide can
then volatilize as hydrocyanic gas:
HCN
(aq) à HCN(g) (5)
Because hydrocyanic gas has a
vapor pressure of 100kPa at 26oC, which is above that of water
(34kPa at 26oC), and a boiling point 79oC, which is below
that of water (100oC), cyanide separation can be enhanced at
elevated temperatures and/or reduced pressures. Distillation rates can also be
increased by increasing the agitation rate, the air/solution ratio and the
surface area at the air/solution interface. Hydrocyanic gas can be captured and
concentrated for recycling in conventional absorption-scrubbing towers. It can
also be vented to the open atmosphere and has been noted to occur naturally in
tailings ponds, especially in warm and arid environments.
2) Adsorption methods
Minerals,
activated carbons and resins adsorb cyanide from solution. Several types of
contact vessels can be used for this purpose and include elutriation columns,
agitation cells, packed-bed columns and loops. Once the cyanide is adsorbed,
the material is separated from the solution by, for example, screening, gravity
separation or flotation. The material is then placed into another vessel where
the cyanide is desorbed into a low volume solution and thus concentrated.
Finally, the material is separated again and in most cases, reactivated and
recycled for further use.
Activated carbon
Active or activated carbons are
typically prepared by partial thermochemical decomposition of carbonaceous
materials- predominantly wood, peat, coal and coconut shells. Adsorption
characteristics change with preparation method and material. Because activated
carbons have high porosity and high surface area, adsorption capacities and
rates are high. Adsorption, however, is not very selective; cations, anions and
neutral species can be adsorbed simultaneously at various sites via ion
exchange, solvation, chelation and coulombic interactions. Activated carbons
are commonly used in packed-bed systems for treating wastewaters and gases. Applications
to cyanide wastewaters have been reported with packed-bed systems and shown to
be applicable at dilute cyanide concentrations, with increased adsorption of
WADs and SADs with copper or silver pretreatment. In
gold leaching with cyanide, packed-bed systems are usually avoided and have
given rise to the use of continuous operations exemplified by carbon-in-column
(CIC), carbon-in-leach (CIL) and carbon-in-pulp (CIP) processes. Although these
processes have been designed for gold-cyanide adsorption, it does not preclude
applying them for the remediation of free or other metal-cyanide complexes.
High adsorption capacities and rates as well as strong ability for reactivation
are important parameters for all activated carbons.
Resins
Resins are usually polymeric beads
containing a variety of surface functional groups with either chelation or
ion-exchange capabilities, somewhat similar to solvent extraction processes.
They can be selective and have high adsorption capacities depending on whether
the chelating or ion exchange properties are strong or weak. Resins that are
deposited on substrates as thin films are predominantly used in packed-bed
systems, whereas resins that do not require a substrate are mostly used in
continuous processes like those used with activated carbons for gold.
Gold-blatt developed the first resin column for cyanide recovery. Metal-cyanide
complexes have since been found to adsorb more strongly but this adsorption is
dependent on which resin is being used and how the solution and/or resin are pretreated.
Thiocyanate appears to adsorb weakly. In a comparison of resins to activated
carbons, resins can be more cost effective since they resist organic fouling,
regenerate more efficiently, have longer life and desorbs faster. At present,
the only resin being used in industry for cyanide recovery is the chelation
resin.
3)
Treatment with hydrogen peroxide.
While
hydrogen peroxide, H2O2 will oxidize free cyanide; it is
common to catalyze the reaction with a transition metal such as soluble copper,
vanadium, tungsten or silver in concentrations of 5 to 50 mg/l. The oxidation
requires 1.26 lbs H2O2 per lb cyanide and is described as
follows:
CN-
+ H2O2 à CNO- + H2O (pH
9-10/ catalyst)
This simple system is adequate for
treating both free cyanide and some weak acid dissociable cyanides such those
complexed with zinc, copper or cadmium. Less reactive cyanides such as those
complexed with nickel or silver may require addition of a chelating agent to
encourage dissociation. Inert cyanides such as ferricyanides can only be
destroyed by photoactivation (using UV- H2O2).
With any peroxygen system, a pH of
9-10 should be maintained if cyanide is present to avoid release of hydrogen
cyanide gas. Reaction rates can be increased by several means: raising the
temperature, increasing catalyst dose and/or using excess H2O2.
For example, 25 degrees C and without catalysis, the conversion of free cyanide
to cyanate takes two to three hours; and at 50 degrees C, one hour or less. The
inclusion of 10 mg/l Cu will increase the rate 2-3 fold, while a 20% excess of
H2O2 will increase the rate by about 30%.
As with alkaline chlorination, the
product of the H2O2 reaction is cyanate (CNO-),
which is 1000 times less toxic than cyanide and is often acceptable for
discharge. Alternatively, cyanate can be destroyed through acid hydrolysis,
forming carbon carbon dioxide and ammonia. The equation is:
CNO- + 2H2O à CO2 + NH3 + OH- (acid)
The lower
the pH, the faster the hydrolysis. At pH 2, CNO- is hydrolyzed in 5
minutes, at pH 5, 60 minutes and at pH 7, 22 hours.
4) Treatment with peroxymonosulfuric acid
If the rate of cyanide oxidation is
important, peroxymonosulfuric acid (Caro’s acid) is recommended. Caro’s acid is
an equilibrium product formed from H2O2 and sulfuric acid
and is typically produced onsite using a compact, modular generator:
H2O2 + H2SO4 <==>
H2SO5 + H2O
This process is used at some of the
world’s largest gold refining operations. For smaller scale operations, Caro’s
acid can be prepared through hydrolysis of ammonium persulfate:
(NH4)2S2O6 + H2O
à NH4HSO4 + NH4HSO5
(H2SO4/ steam)
With Caro’s acid, the conversion of
cyanide to cyanate is complete in a few minutes, according to the following
equation:
CN- + H2SO5
à CNO- + H2SO4
(pH 10)
The additions of excess Caro’s acid
will hydolize the cyanate to carbonate and nitrogen in the same step:
2OH- + CNO- + 3SO52- à 2CO32- + N2 + 3SO42-
+ H2O
Under acidic conditions, a smaller
amount of Caro’s acid will be needed since cyanate hydrolysis (second reaction
below) is greatly accelerated. The equations are as follow:
2H+ + 2CNO- + 3H2SO5 à 2CO2 + N2 + 3H2SO4
+ H2O
CNO- + 2H2O à CO2 + NH3 + OH-
5) Rhodacs Process
Crude gas produces in the
manufacturer of coal gas (COG) contains hydrogen cyanide. If it is released
directly, it would contaminate air or cause corrosion on industrial facilities.
Rhodacs process can remove hydrogen cyanide in the crude gas efficiently and at
low cost.
By scrubbing crude gas containing
hydrogen cyanide with sulfur suspended alkalic solution, hydrogen cyanide is
removed in the form of thiocyanate, which is non-toxic. It can be applied on
purification for coal gas or oil gas. The advantages of this process are:
·
Decyanization efficiency can be
adjusted in the design up to 100% according to the customer’s requirement.
·
When H2S, NH3 and
HCN are contained simultaneously in the process, gas, toxic substances can be
removed through chemical reactions of these compounds, thus improving the
process economy.
·
Compact system.
·
Easy operation and maintenance.
SUMMARY
Hydrogen
cyanide is released by the combustion of nitrogen containing plastics and is an
extremely toxic compound. Cyanide compounds refer to a group of substances
containing the cyanide ion that found in nature in some plants, blue green
algae, bacteria and fungi. Cyanide gas is highly flammable and in liquid form
is both very volatile and flammable. Hydrogen cyanide is a colourless or pale
blue liquid or gas. It may be synthesized directly from ammonia and carbon
monoxide or from ammonia, oxygen and natural gas. At normal temperature and
pressure, hydrogen cyanide is a volatile, colourless gas or a yellow brown
liquid. Its boiling point is at 260C and its melting point is at
–13.40C. The ability to
detect the odour, however, is genetically determined and many people are unable
to detect its presence. Hydrogen cyanide is miscible with water and alcohol and
slightly soluble in ether. It is intensely poisonous even when mixed with air
and is highly toxic to all species in water. Synonyms are hydrocyanic acid,
prussic acid, carbon hydride nitride, formic anammonide and formonitrile.
Cyanides are not persistent in water or soil and may accumulate in bottom
sediments. In air, cyanide is present mainly as gaseous hydrogen cyanide. Most
cyanide in surface water will form hydrogen cyanide and evaporate. Cyanide in
soil can form hydrogen cyanide and evaporate too. The predominant users of
cyanide are the steel, electroplating, mining and chemical industries. In gold
mining, a dilute cyanide solution is sprayed on crushed ore that is placed in
piles. Cyanide and related compounds often are contained in mine tailings.
Cyanide may be released from process tanks and storage areas or from tailings
waste streams and storage areas. The lower the pH, the greater the rate of
hydrogen cyanide evolution. Various procedures exist for treating cyanide and
are comprised of several physical, adsorption, complexation and/or oxidation
methods.
REFERENCES:
1.
Cyanide Remediation. C.A Young
and T.S Jordan. Department of Metallurgical Engineering, Montana Tech.
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