| Discovery | |
|---|---|
| Discovered by | Dr. Gerhard Schrader |
| Discovered in | 1949 |
| Chemical Characteristics | |
| Chemical Name | (fluoro-methyl-phosphoryl)oxycyclohexane |
| Chemical Family | Fluorinated organophosphorous compound |
| Chemical Formula | C7H14FO2P |
| Airborne Exposure Limit | 0.0001 mg/m3 |
| Boiling point | 239 °C (462 °F) |
| Freezing/Melting point | -30 °C (-22 °F) |
| Vapor pressure | at 25 °C |
| Flash point | 94 °C (201 °F) |
| Vapor relative density (air=1) | 6.2 |
| Liquid density | 1.1278 g/cc @ 25 °C |
| Solubility in Water | Almost insoluble |
| Appearance and color | Colorless liquid. Odor sweet, musk, peaches, shellac |
Cyclosarin or GF (Cyclohexyl methylphosphonofluoridate) is an extremely toxic substance that is one of the world's most dangerous weapons of war. It is the most obscure member of the G-series family of nerve agents, a group of chemical weapon discovered and synthesized by a German team, led by Dr. Gerhard Schrader, during or soon after World War II.
As a chemical weapon, it is classified as a weapon of mass destruction by the United Nations according to UN Resolution 687, and its production and stockpiling was outlawed by the Chemical Weapons Convention of 1993.
At room temperature, cyclosarin is a colorless liquid whose odor has been variously described as sweet and musty, and resembling peaches or shellac. Unlike sarin, cyclosarin is a persistent liquid, meaning that it has a low vapor pressure, and therefore evaporates relatively slowly: about 69 times more slowly than sarin and 20 times more slowly than water. Its military value is therefore much greater as a liquid chemical weapon.
Also unlike sarin, cyclosarin is flammable, with a flash point of 94°C (201 °F).
Like other nerve agents, Cyclosarin can be shipped in binary munitions.
A cyclosarin binary weapon would most likely contain methyphosphonyldifluoride in one capsule with the other capsule containing either cyclohexanol or a mixture of cyclohexylamine and cyclohexanol.
Anticholinesterases | Esters | Organophosphates | Nerve agents
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"Cyclosarin".
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