alant
Well-Known Member
Steelworks, mid70s, blast furnace, serious CO risk. Foreman walking past the base, falls over, electrician goes to rescue him, falls over. BA clad men got them away, was touch and go. They fed them pure oxygen BUT it took days before they recovered, there were concerns about brain damage. As others have said, CO fills red blood corpuscles and is hard to get rid of. This stops oxygen being taken around the body.
We had the same situation offshore Angola. H2S does the same. Strong concentration and you fall over, unconscious!
Stu
Used to work in an old chemical plant using CO as a process gas, with many leaks.
Victims of gassing, were usually walked around in fresh air until 'recovered'.
H2S, I understood was similar to HCN, in its poisoning effect.
Smoking in some atmospheres, can also kill - if any trichloroethylene in the atmosphere (used to be used in drycleaners/degreasers) is inhaled through a hot cigarette tip, it forms phosgene (used in WW1 trenches).
Dangerous world we live in.