Previous Chapter: Liquid Wastes
Suggested Citation: "Solid Wastes." National Research Council. 1993. Alternative Technologies for the Destruction of Chemical Agents and Munitions. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/2218.

TABLE 4-1 Permissible Agent Hazard Concentrations in Air and Lethal Doses

 

Permissible Hazard Levels in Air(mg/m3)

Lethal Human Doses

Agent

Workersa

Stack Emissionsb

General Populationc

Skin (LD50, mg/kg)

Intravenous (LD50, mg/kg)

Inhalation (LCt50, mg—min/m3)

GA

0.0001

0.0003

0.000003

14-21

0.014

135-400

GB

0.0001

0.0003

0.000003

24

0.014

70—100

VX

0.00001

0.0003

0.000003

0.04

0.008

20-50

H/HD/HT

0.003

0.03

0.0001

100

10,000

L

0.003

0.03

0.003

 

100,000

a For 8-hour exposure.

b Maximum concentration in exhaust stack.

c For 72-hour exposure.

Note: The Army standards shown in the first three columns set the minimum level of performance required for gas release by any alternative process and are applicable to all four process streams. LCt50 and LD50 represent dosage that result in 50 percent lethality.

Source: U.S. Department of the Army (1974, 1975); PEIS (1988).

Solid Wastes

A major consideration at JACADS is the segregation of waste that may have been contaminated by agent from other hazardous and nonhazardous waste. Waste that is known never to have been contaminated is handled as simple hazardous or nonhazardous waste.

The Army has three self-imposed categories of chemical agent contamination of solid wastes:

  • Level 1X is contaminated material that has not yet been processed or that still has detectable agent according to air monitoring above the material. This material must be controlled according to Army regulations and procedures.

  • Level 3X was established primarily for worker safety to indicate potentially contaminated material or previously contaminated material that has been decontaminated to show zero residual contamination by air monitoring above the material. Such material includes wood pallets that have

Suggested Citation: "Solid Wastes." National Research Council. 1993. Alternative Technologies for the Destruction of Chemical Agents and Munitions. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/2218.
Page 82
Next Chapter: GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS IN ASSESSING UNTESTED ALTERNATIVE TECHNOLOGIES
Subscribe to Emails from the National Academies
Stay up to date on activities, publications, and events by subscribing to email updates.