Lois Ember
VX nerve gas destruction at the Army's Newport Chemical Agent
Disposal Facility, in Indiana, resumed on Sept. 14. Neutralization of the
nerve gas was halted in June in part because tests found the caustic wastewater,
dubbed hydrolysate, to be flammable. Diisopropylamine (DIPA) was fingered
as the culprit.
Army engineers, Project Manager Jeffrey Brubaker says, found
the recipe for reducing flammability. According to Brubaker, the solution
is to mix VX with hot water and sodium hydroxide at 194 °F for one hour.
Then the temperature in the reactor is lowered to 150 °F for the remainder
of the neutralization process. While neutralization is occurring, nitrogen
is passed through the reactor to reduce the level of DIPA in the hydrolysate.
Jeffrey Lindblad, spokesman for the Army's Chemical Materials
Agency, says the caustic wastewater produced is being stored on-site in "four
intermodal containers" until the Army receives the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention's
(CDC) approval to ship it off-site for additional treatment. Until the
flammability problem surfaced, a DuPont facility in New Jersey was to receive
the hydrolysate for secondary treatment and ultimate discharge into the Delaware
River.
There is opposition in New Jersey and Delaware to off-site
treatment, and DuPont's operating permit
does not yet allow for receipt of hydrolysate. Approval depends to a great
degree on CDC's recommendation that transporting and treating the hydrolysate
off-site is safe for the environment and the health of workers. CDC spokeswoman
Rachel Powell says, "We don't yet have a date for when the final VX report
will be released," but it is not likely for several months. At press time,
about 4,250 gal of VX had been neutralized and stored at Newport.
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