'Aluminium phosphide' (AlP) is a compound of
aluminium and
phosphorus. It is a grey-green to green-yellow solid which reacts with
moisture and acids to release
phosphine.
CAS registry number .
AlP is used as a
rodenticide,
insecticide and
fumigant for stored cereal grains. It is used to kill small verminous
mammals such as
moles,
rabbits and
rodents. In contact with water or acids, it releases
phosphine, which acts as a fumigant; with acids, the reaction is much faster. The tablets or pellets typically also contain other chemicals which evolve
ammonia which helps to reduce the potential for spontaneous
ignition or
explosion of the phosphine gas. They also contain other agents, such as
methanethiol, to give the gas a detectable garlic smell to help warn against its presence in the atmosphere.
Metal phosphides have been used as a means of
killing rodents. A mixture of food and aluminium phosphide is left where the rodents can eat it. The acid in the digestive system of the rodent reacts with the phosphide to generate the toxic phosphine gas. This method of vermin control has possible use in places where rodents immune to many of the common poisons have appeared. Other pesticides similar to aluminium phosphide are
zinc phosphide and
calcium phosphide.
As a rodenticide, aluminium phosphide can be encountered under names eg. 'Celphos', 'Phostoxin', and 'Quick Phos'.
Industrially, AlP is used in the
semiconductor industry as a
semiconductor material, usually combined with other elements to make more stable semiconductor
alloys for applications in devices such as
light-emitting diodes (e.g.
aluminium gallium indium phosphide).
Substances to avoid:
water.
News
★
ABC News: Texas Toddler Dies After Family Puts Industrial-Strength Pesticide in Home - LUBBOCK, Texas Jul 18, 2007 (AP)
References
★ Aluminium phosphide poisoning: a prospective study of 16 cases in one year, JS Chopra, OP Kalra, VS Malik, R Sharma and A Chandna, Postgraduate Medical Journal, 1986, Vol 62, 1113-1115
External links
★
MSDS at University of Oxford