Fireworks may be greener this year
Researchers revising the chemistry behind the pyrotechnic displays

LiveScience

updated 1:29 p.m. CT, Tues., July. 1, 2008

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25464853/


The rocket's red glare on future July Fourth celebrations may be more 
eco-friendly as researchers revise the chemistry behind the pyrotechnic 
displays.

Roman candles and roadside flares typically use potassium perchlorate to 
speed up the fuel-burning process that drives them. As they burn, they 
should consume most of the perchlorate, but sometimes the reaction snuffs 
out before all the fuel is consumed, leaving behind some of the chemical. 
Excess perchlorate is also sometimes added to pyrotechnics.

These leftovers can be a problem because they inhibit the working of the 
thyroid gland, which produces a key hormone in the human body, according to 
an article in the June 30 issue of Chemical & Engineering News.

A 2007 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency study mentioned in the article 
measured perchlorate levels in a small lake in Oklahoma where an annual 
Fourth of July fireworks show is held. Within 14 hours of the display, 
perchlorate levels in the water were 1,000 times higher than they were 
naturally.

One way chemists are trying to revamp these explosive displays is by using 
compounds with a high nitrogen content to supply the energy that drives the 
burning reaction. Getting all that energy from breaking nitrogen bonds 
means that less perchlorate is needed to make those burning shapes in the sky.

Less perchlorate also means less smoke, which in turn means that fewer 
coloring agents, which are usually heavy metals like strontium, barium and 
copper, are needed to dazzle patriotic revelers.

Another compound in the new fireworks, nitrocellulose, doesn't need 
perchlorate at all to light up the night.

"Nitrocellulose is probably one of the best low-smoke ingredients," Darren 
Naud of DMD Systems told Chemical & Engineering News. "It burns with little 
smoke, and there's no fallout or residual combustion by-products that are 
nasty. There's just [carbon dioxide], water and nitrogen."

Some of these greener pyrotechnics are already being used in fireworks 
displays held outdoors and indoors during concerts.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/25464853/


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu

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