Here's another good document on how to handle picric acid powder

www.ehs.wisc.edu/chem/SafeHandlingOfPicricAcid.pdf



-----Original Message-----
From: Morken, Timothy via Histonet [mailto:histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] 
Sent: Friday, May 06, 2016 8:28 AM
To: Julio Benavides
Cc: Histonet
Subject: Re: [Histonet] picric acid

Julio, you can just pour water into the container. We always oversaturated so 
that a layer of water was on top of the powder. 

Look at this explanation
http://oag.ca.gov/sites/all/files/agweb/pdfs/cci/safety/picric.pdf

or read the text below if you cannot open this.  This contains instructions on 
how to properly store picric acid powder, and how to deal with dry powder found 
in the lab.

Long ago I had the pleasure of discovering a batch of six 2kg bottles of dry 
picric acid in our "bunker" where we stored flammables. Over 10 years old 
according to dates on the box. We called in the fire department to take care of 
it. They hosed it down, removed it and disposed of it; how, I don't know. 


Tim Morken
Pathology Site Manager, Parnassus
Supervisor, Electron Microscopy/Neuromuscular Special Studies Department of 
Pathology UC San Francisco Medical Center


+++++++++++++++
PICRIC ACID HAZARDS
Mark Cameron, CIH
Every couple months, an article appears in the local paper about a bomb 
disposal team removing picric acid that was found in a laboratory. The material 
is usually taken to be blown up. So why is picric acid considered so dangerous? 
Well, let’s look at the history of the use of Picric Acid and see what can be 
done to avoid those types of situations.

Picric Acid (2,4,6 Trinitrophenol) is frequently found in forensic laboratories 
for use in the Christmas Tree stain (1) and for Urine detection (2). Histology 
uses include connective tissue stain (Jullien’s picroindogocarmine and Van 
Gieson’s picro-acid fuchsin), cytoplasmic stain (Van Gieson’s with iron 
hematoxylin), woody sections (picro aniline blue) and as a fixative agent (3). 
It was used in medicinal formulations in the treatment of malaria, trichinosis, 
herpes, smallpox and antiseptics. A one- percent solution was also used in the 
treatment of burns (4).
British Chemist Peter Woulfe discovered picric acid in 1771. Picric acid was 
named from the Greek word pikros, which means “bitter” due to its bitter taste 
(5). It was used to dye silk and wool yellow. Workers making picric acid during 
World War I were called “canaries” because their skin was stained yellow (6).

The explosive characteristics of Picric acid were discovered early. In 1885, 
experiments with picric acid were conducted in Lydd, England and the English 
adopted it as an explosive material called Lyddite in 1888. It was used 
extensively in bombs and grenades during World War I (7). Anhydrous Picric acid 
is similar to TNT. It needs usually needs a “booster” such as a primer to 
create the explosion. However, as a strong acid, picric acid attacks common 
metals (except tin and aluminum) creating explosive salts, which are 
shock-sensitive. Bombs, mines and grenades were coated with tin or ashpatim to 
prevent the picric acid from contacting the metallic shell (8).

Several catastrophic events involving picric acid have occurred. On December 6, 
1917, an ammunition ship in Nova Scotia carrying 2,300 tons of picric acid as 
well as 400,000 pounds of TNT caught fire and exploded. Over 1,900 people were 
killed immediately and 9,000 were injured (9). Shock-sensitive metal picrates 
demonstrated their hazardous nature on May 1, 1916 when a fire at a French 
ammunition factory caused molten picric acid to flow onto the concrete floor. 
Calcium picrate was formed and detonated, killing 170 people (10).
06/18/02

Have there been any explosions in laboratories? There are no documented 
instances of spontaneous detonation of picric acid in a laboratory (11). The 
Department of Transportation classifies Picric Acid (Trinitrophenol) with less 
than 30% water by mass as a Class 1.1D explosive; with greater than 10% water 
by volume, it is a class 4.1 flammable solid (12). In the wetted state, it is 
unlikely to be an explosive hazard. If a bomb squad tries to blow it up, the 
picric acid will not detonate (13) and will just spread picric all over the 
area!
The big concern has been with finding dehydrated picric acid. The most 
dangerous situations is if the bottle is old and has a metal cap. Under these 
circumstances, shock sensitive metal picrates may have formed on the cap 
contact area. Explosive experts should be contacted under these situations. 
Knowledgeable bomb disposal experts will use a robot to pick up the container 
and place it in water to re-hydrate the material (14) or remove it for 
detonation elsewhere.

If a plastic cap is present, and the acid inside has dried, some crystals may 
be on the threads and the friction of removing a plastic cap might be enough to 
detonate the container. Under these circumstances, the container may be safe 
enough to place in a pail of water. Submerge the bottle to allow water to enter 
the cap and threads and dissolve any crystals that might be on the threads. Add 
ice to cause shrinkage of the bottle to enhance penetration of the water. Leave 
it like this for several days, until water can be seen inside the bottle. At 
this point, it is safe to open the cap and re-hydrate the acid inside (15). 
Whenever in doubt, contact explosives experts.
Of course, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. If you really need 
to have picric acid in your lab, here’s what you should do:
1.
Make sure that the picric acid is kept wet! Do not open a new bottle until 
needed. Then date the container to show when it was first used to help you in a 
routine inspection program. As part of your lab inspection program, check the 
hydration of your picric acid at least every six months and add distilled water 
as necessary.
2.
Do not use metal spatulas to remove the material.
3.
Be sure to clean the bottleneck, cap and threads with a wet cloth before 
resealing (16).
4.
Get rid of old bottles with metal caps
5.
Do not store large amounts of picric acid. Dispose of your picric acid every 
two years (17).
6.
If possible, eliminate it from your inventory by purchasing premixed stains or 
a 1% solution for using in stain preparation.
If you decide to dispose of your wet picric acid, several options are 
available. First, you could try reducing the picric acid to a non-explosive 
form using sodium hydroxide and sodium sulfide (18). After this treatment, the 
material will still be toxic and have to be
disposed of as hazardous waste. Alternatively, it could be manifested as a 
flammable solid for hazardous waste and disposed of by incineration. DO NOT 
pour it down the drain; it could react with copper or iron piping to form the 
explosive salts.
As a last consideration, Picric Acid is toxic. Ingestion of 1-2 grams would 
cause severe poisoning. The dust is irritating to the skin and eye. A peculiar 
effect on the eye is “yellow” tainted vision. Systemic poisoning causes 
headache, vertigo, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea. The skin will turn yellow in 
severe exposures. Red colored urine may be produced (19). These symptoms would 
not expected in the laboratory environment under traditional uses.

REFERENCES
1.
Gaensslen, R., Mertens, J., Lee, H., Stolotow, M., “Staining and Extraction 
Techniques”, Proceeding of a Forensic Science Symposium on the Analysis of 
Sexual Assault Evidence., FBI Academy, 1983.
2.
Slot C. “Plasma creatinine determination. A new and specific Jaffe reaction 
method.” Scand J. Clin. Lab. Invest. 1965, 17: 381
3.
Lillie, R.D., “H.J. Conn’s Biological Stains”, Williams & Wilkins Company, 
1969, Baltimore, MD, pages 5, 60-61.
4.
Patty’s Toxicology, John Wiley & Sons: New York, 2000, Volume IIB, page 980.
5.
Davis, Tenney, “The Chemistry of Powder and Explosives”, Angriff Press, 1984, 
page 164.
6.
Hamilton, Alice, “Exploring the Dangerous Trades”, American Industrial Hygiene 
Association: Fairfax, Virginia, 1995, page 185.
7.
Cooper, Paul, “Explosives Engineering”, Wiley-VCH, 1996, page 33.
8.
Davis, ibid.
9.
Phifer, Russell, “Picric Acid: When is Panic Justified?”, Speaking of Safety, 
Volume 9, No. 2, 2000, page 1-3.
10.
Medard, Louis, “Accidental Explosions, Volume 2: Types of Explosive 
Substances”, John Wiley and Sons: New York, 1989, page 739.
11.
Phifer, ibid.
12.
Code of Federal Regulations, Title 49, Section 172.101.
13.
Kraut, Irv, In Handbook of Chemical Health and Safety, Alaimo, Robert J., Ed., 
Oxford University Press; New York, 2001, page 406.
14.
Personal Communication with Tom Gundlach of RHR Inc., August 23, 2000.
15.
Guidance for the Management of Reactive Chemicals, Picric Acid, 
http://www.uwsa.edu/oslp/ehs/info/picric.htm , 8/97 revision.
16.
Safe Use and Management of Picric Acid, Safety Net #104, 
http://wwwehs.ucdavis.edu/sflynet/sn-104.html ,11/21/01
17.
Biological & Chemical Safety Code, Appendix H-3, Handling Procedures for 
Unstable Agents, University of Saskatchewan, Department of Health and Safety, 
http://duke.usask.ca/~whiterv/unstable.html, 11/21/01.
18.
Lunn, George and Sansone, Eric B., “Destruction of Hazardous Chemicals in the 
Laboratory”, John Wiley & Sons: New York, 1990, page 219-221.
06/18/02
19.
Documentation of the Threshold Limit Values, American Conference of 
Governmental Industrial Hygienists, Inc.: Cincinnati, Ohio, 1991, page 1271.
06/18/02


+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
-----Original Message-----
From: Julio Benavides via Histonet [mailto:histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu] 
Sent: Friday, May 06, 2016 7:11 AM
To: histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu
Subject: Re: [Histonet] picric acid

Hi,

For how long can you keep it in water? any particular dilution or just keep it 
humid (saturation)?

We also do have some dry picric acid in the lab and, after reading about the 
bomb squad, I was begining to get concerned...

Thanks a lot

julio


El 06/05/2016 a las 15:30, Rene J Buesa via Histonet escribió:
> Picric acid is an expensive reagent useful in many histology 
> procedures.The advise you received of adding water is a good one.Humid 
> picric acid will not explode at all. Why waste a good reagent?Keep 
> humid, you will eventually used it.René
>
>      On Thursday, May 5, 2016 3:24 PM, Mca Werdler via Histonet 
> <histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu> wrote:
>   
>
>   Dear histonetters,
>
> Since a few months, i started working in a histology lab, run only by 
> me ( coworkers are not specialized in histology). There has not worked 
> here a person at histology for about 2 years.
>
> After many new protocols, i decided to clear out some chemicals.
> Now i found around 1 KG of DRY picric acid. I informed my coworkers 
> about this, and they said just to dissolve everything in water.
>
> What do you guys think is the best way for handeling with this 
> explosive chemical? Thank you all in advance!
>
> Maarten
> _______________________________________________
> Histonet mailing list
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>
>
>    
> _______________________________________________
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