Blood agent

[1] Blood agents are fast-acting, potentially lethal poisons that typically manifest at room temperature as volatile colorless gases with a faint odor.[2] Arsine gas, formed when arsenic encounters an acid, is used as a pesticide and in the semiconductor industry; most exposures to it occur accidentally in the workplace.In enclosed areas, fire extinguishers spraying sodium carbonate can decontaminate hydrogen cyanide, but the resulting metal salts remain poisonous on contact.[6] One of the earliest proposed chemical weapons, cacodyl oxide, or Cadet's fuming liquid, also displays properties of a blood agent (as well as those of a malodorant).It was proposed as a chemical weapon in the British Empire during the Crimean War, along with the significantly more potent blood agent, cacodyl cyanide.[7] The most significant practical application of blood agents was the use of hydrogen cyanide (Zyklon B) in gas chambers by Nazi Germany to commit the mass murder of Jews and others in the course of the Holocaust.
Chemical agentsCyanogen chloride (CK)Hydrogen cyanide (AC)Arsine (SA)BlisterEthyldichloroarsine (ED)Methyldichloroarsine (MD)Phenyldichloroarsine (PD)Lewisite (L)Mustard gas(HD H HT HL HQ)Nitrogen mustardPhosgene oxime (CX)C01-A035C01-A039Tabun (GA)Sarin (GB)Chlorosarin (GC)Soman (GD)Ethylsarin (GE)Cyclosarin (GF)EA-3148V-sub x/GD-7Novichok agentsC01-A042Pulmonary/chokingChlorineChloropicrin (PS)Phosgene (CG)Diphosgene (DP)Disulfur decafluorideVomitingAdamsiteChloropicrinDiphenylchlorarsineDiphenylcyanoarsineIncapacitating agentsAgent 15 (BZ)Dimethylheptylpyran (DMHP)EA-3167Kolokol-1PAVA spraySleeping gasXylyl bromidePepper spray (OC)CN (mace)List of chemical warfare agentschemical agentcyanidearsenicinhalationingestionchemical weaponsaerosolsvolatilitycigarette smokesynthetic fabricspolyurethaneArsinerespiratory tractHydrogen cyanidethiocyanatebitter almondscyanogen chlorideCyanide poisoningcause of deathrespiratory failurecellular leveloxygencarbon dioxideelectron transport chainmitochondriared blood cellssodium carbonateCyanogenCyanogen bromideblister agentPhosgenechoking agentSodium cyanidepotassium cyanideCarbon monoxidecarbon monoxide poisoningcacodyl oxideCadet's fuming liquidthe British EmpireCrimean Warcacodyl cyanideZyklon Bgas chambersNazi Germanythe HolocaustHayes, Peterchemical warfareincapacitationriot controlHydrogen sulfidePhosphinePhosphorus trifluorideMethyl cyanoformateIron pentacarbonylNickel tetracarbonyl2,3,7,8-TetrachlorodibenzodioxinGlycolonitrileLactonitrileAcetone cyanohydrinStibineChloral cyanohydrinBlister agentsArsenicalsEthyldichloroarsineMethyldichloroarsinePhenyldichloroarsineLewisiteLewisite 2Lewisite 3Sulfur mustardsLevinstein mustardNitrogen mustardsTL-301Nettle agentsPhosgene oximeDibutylchloromethyltin chlorideSelenium oxychlorideNerve agentsChlorosarinThiosarinChlorosomanEthylsarinCyclosarinFluorotabunEA-1356EA-4352CrotylsarinEA-2192EA-1763Chinese VXV-sub x (GD-7)GV (EA-5365)CarbamatesDimethylcarbamoyl fluorideEA-3887EA-3887AEA-3966EA-3990EA-4056T-1123T-1152T-1194Octamethylene-bis(5-dimethylcarbamoxyisoquinolinium bromide)TL-599TL-1238TL-1299TL-1317Miotine (AR-28/T-1843)3152 CT4-686-293-01 (Agent 1-10)Diisopropyl fluorophosphateDicyclohexyl phosphorofluoridateEA-2012EA-2054EA-2098EA-26132-Ethoxycarbonyl-1-methylvinyl cyclohexyl methylphosphonateNeopentylene fluorophosphateSelenophosPhospholineR-16661Ro 3-0422Methanesulfonyl fluorideDimefox (TL-792)AcetonitrileA.P.C. complexCyclohexanol1,8-DibromooctaneN,N-DiisopropylaminoethanolEA-1250EA-1224Dimethylamidophosphoric dichlorideDimethylamidophosphoric dicyanideEthylphosphonoselenoic dichlorideFormaldoxime4-HydroxycoumarinIsopropyl alcoholMethyldichlorophosphineMethylphosphonyl difluoride (difluoro)Methylphosphonyl dichloride (dichloro)NitromethaneOPA mixturePhosphoryl chloridePhosphorus pentachloridePhosphorus trichloridePinacolonePinacolyl alcoholPhenacyl chloride2,4,5-Trichlorophenol3,3,5-TrimethylcyclohexanolTriethyl phosphiteTrimethyl phosphiteNeurotoxinsAnatoxin-aSaxitoxinBungarotoxinBotulinum toxinTetanospasminRyanodineCiguatoxinGuanitoxinChlorophenylsilatranePalytoxinMaitotoxinTetrodotoxinAconitineBrevetoxinStrychnineAntillatoxinTetraethylleadDimethylmercuryHN1 hydrochlorideHN2 hydrochlorideHN3 hydrochlorideA-8564PicrotoxinSulfuryl fluorideTremorineOxotremorineBatrachotoxinTetramethylenedisulfotetramine (TETS)Bicyclic phosphatesCloflubicyneTrimethylolpropane phosphiteDomoic acidPulmonary/choking agentsBromineFluorinePerfluoroisobuteneDimethyl(trifluoromethylthio)arsineDiphosgeneAcroleinEthyl bromoacetatePerchloromethyl mercaptanPhenylcarbylamine chlorideTetranitromethaneTetrachlorodinitroethaneChlorine trifluoridePerchloryl fluorideCadmium oxideCadmium chlorideMercuric chlorideSelenium dioxideSelenoyl fluorideTrifluoronitrosomethaneTrichloronitrosomethaneNitric oxideNitrogen dioxideDinitrogen tetroxideSulfur dioxideMethyl isocyanateEthenoneMethyl vinyl ketoneTrifluoroacetyl chlorideSalcomineFluomineUranium hexafluorideDiboraneGreen CrossVomiting agentsLithargeglycerineo-DianisidineIncapacitatingagentsApomorphineButyrophenoneEA-4941EtorphineEA-2092CS-4297EtoxadrolDimethylheptylpyranEA-2148EA-3443PethidineEA-3580IbogaineEA-3834LSD-25PsilocybinCarfentanilJB-318JB-336CS-27349CAR-226,086CAR-301,060CAR-302,196CAR-302,282CAR-302,668BenperidolDesfluraneEnfluraneBufoteninIsofluraneHalothaneSevofluranePentazocineProcarbazineFluphenazineChlorpromazineLachrymatoryagentsPepper sprayMace (spray)Benzyl chlorideBenzyl bromideBenzyl iodideBromobenzyl cyanideThiophosgeneChloroacetoneBromoacetoneBromomethyl ethyl ketonePhenacyl bromideChloroacetophenone oximeEthyl iodoacetateIodoacetoneAllyl isothiocyanateHexamethylene diisocyanateCrotonaldehydeDRC-5593MalodorantThioacetoneAllicinSkatoleCadaverinePutrescineMethyl cyanoacrylateN-MethylmorpholineAllyl alcoholOsmium tetroxideCyclopiazonic acidHistrionicotoxinsAflatoxinsEnterotoxin type BGrayanotoxinModeccinShiga toxinT-2 mycotoxinVolkensinVeratridineMethyl fluoroacetateNapalmFluoroethyl fluoroacetateDepleted uraniumuranium oxidesPlutoniumits compoundsPoloniumWhite phosphorusCB military symbol