Blood Agents - List of Blood Agents

List of Blood Agents

The information in the following table, which lists blood agents of military significance, is taken from Ledgard. The values given are on a scale from 1 to 10.

Agent Description Melting / boiling point Effectiveness as blood agent Persistence, open area Persistence, enclosed area Field stability Storage stability Toxicity as blood agent
Hydrogen cyanide Colorless gas or liquid, almond odor, burns with a bluish flame. -13 / 26 °C 10 2 9 10 8 10
Cyanogen Colorless gas, almond odor, burns with a pinkish flame having a blue border. -28 / -21 °C 9 2 9 8 7 9
Cyanogen chloride Colorless gas or liquid, pungent and biting odor, soluble in water and alcohol. -6 / 14 °C 8 3 9 9 9 8
Cyanogen bromide Colorless needle-shaped or cubic crystals, tending to volatize on standing, hence of limited usefulness as a weapon. 52 / 62 °C 9 5 8 5 6 8
Arsine Colorless gas, garlic-like odor, slightly soluble in water. -117 / -62 °C 9 3 8 5 9 9
Vinyl arsine Colorless liquid, irritating and bitter odor, slightly soluble in water, also acts as a blister agent. 124 °C (boiling) 7 7 9 8 9 6
Phosgene Colorless gas and slightly yellow liquid, moldy hay odor, slightly soluble in water and soluble in most solvents, also acts as a choking agent. -118 / 8 10 6 9 5 8 6

Sodium cyanide and potassium cyanide, colorless crystalline compounds similar in appearance to sugar, also act as blood agents. Carbon monoxide could technically be called a blood agent because it binds with oxygen-carrying hemoglobin in the blood (see carbon monoxide poisoning), but its high volatility makes it impractical as a chemical warfare agent.

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