Section 01
NITROGEN DIOXIDE FUNDAMENTALS
Nitrogen dioxide (NO₂) is a reddish-brown, toxic gas with a sharp, bleach-like odor. It is heavier than air (MW 46 g/mol) and is one of the primary combustion byproducts encountered at structure fires, post-blast environments, and confined space operations involving internal combustion engines or welding. NO₂ is particularly hazardous because of its delayed toxicity — exposed individuals may feel relatively well for hours before experiencing potentially fatal pulmonary edema.
Post-Fire / Overhaul Operations
NO₂ is produced in all high-temperature combustion. Overhaul operations in smoldering structures generate NO₂ alongside CO. Responders who remove SCBA during overhaul due to low CO readings may still receive significant NO₂ doses.
Post-Blast Environments
Explosives detonation produces large volumes of NO₂ (brown/orange blast cloud). Post-blast entry before NO₂ dissipates is a significant exposure hazard. "Brown fume" from a detonation is a visual indicator of dangerous NO₂ concentrations.
Silo Gas (Silo Filler's Disease)
Fresh silage fermentation produces NO₂ from nitrate reduction in plant material. Silo gas — predominantly NO₂ — accumulates at the base of silos in concentrations that can reach IDLH within 24 hours of filling. A well-documented agricultural confined space fatality cause.
Arc Welding and Cutting
Electric arc processes at high temperatures fix atmospheric nitrogen into NO, which oxidizes rapidly to NO₂. Confined space welding without ventilation is a significant NO₂ source. OSHA 1910.252 addresses welding ventilation requirements.
NO₂ has low immediate irritancy relative to its toxicity. A person exposed to 10–20 ppm may experience only mild throat irritation and walk away feeling acceptable. Pulmonary edema can develop 4–48 hours after exposure. This latency period has directly caused fatalities when exposed individuals were released from medical care too early. All NO₂ exposures above the STEL require mandatory extended medical observation.
Section 02
HOW THE NO₂ SENSOR WORKS
NO₂ is detected using a 3-electrode amperometric electrochemical sensor. Like Cl₂, NO₂ is an oxidizing gas and is detected by reduction at the working electrode (cathode). The sensor uses an acidic electrolyte and a reference electrode to maintain stable detection potential.
Working electrode (reduction): NO₂ + 2H⁺ + 2e⁻ → NO + H₂O Counter electrode (oxidation): H₂O → ½O₂ + 2H⁺ + 2e⁻ -- NO₂ gains electrons at the cathode → reduced to NO -- The counter-electrode oxidizes water, completing the circuit -- Output current proportional to NO₂ concentration
NO/NO₂ Chemistry in Combustion
In combustion environments, both nitric oxide (NO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO₂) are produced. NO is initially formed at high temperatures; it oxidizes to NO₂ in the presence of oxygen over time. At a fresh fire, the ratio of NO to NO₂ may favor NO; during overhaul and cooling phases, NO₂ predominates. Both are toxic; both require dedicated sensors.
2NO + O₂ → 2NO₂ (oxidation of NO to NO₂ at lower temperatures)
-- Explains why NO₂ concentration can INCREASE as fire cools during overhaul
Section 03
HEALTH EFFECTS AND TOXICOLOGY
| Concentration | Immediate Effect | Delayed Effect (4–48 hrs) |
|---|---|---|
| 0.2–1 ppm | Odor threshold; mild irritation in some individuals | No delayed effects at brief exposure |
| 1–5 ppm | Noticeable irritation; coughing; above ACGIH TLV-TWA | Possible mild airway inflammation |
| 5–10 ppm | Burning sensation in throat and eyes; OSHA ceiling exceeded | Pulmonary edema possible with prolonged exposure |
| 10–20 ppm | May cause only moderate immediate symptoms | High risk of delayed pulmonary edema — potentially fatal |
| 20 ppm | IDLH — possible immediate respiratory effects | Severe pulmonary edema; life-threatening |
| >50 ppm | Rapid pulmonary edema; methemoglobinemia | Fatal without immediate medical intervention |
Mechanism: Two Pathways of Injury
- Direct oxidative injury: NO₂ reacts with airway moisture to form HNO₃ and HNO₂, causing chemical burns to alveolar tissue. This damages the alveolar-capillary membrane, allowing fluid to flood the alveoli (pulmonary edema).
- Methemoglobin formation: At high concentrations, NO₂ (and NO) oxidize hemoglobin Fe²⁺ to Fe³⁺, forming methemoglobin, which cannot carry oxygen. This compounds hypoxia from pulmonary edema with cellular asphyxiation.
The characteristic reddish-brown smoke cloud immediately after an explosive detonation is largely NO₂. Concentrations within the cloud may reach tens to hundreds of ppm. Post-blast entry must be delayed until air monitoring confirms safe levels AND the cloud has visibly cleared. Visual observation of the brown color is a useful field indicator but is not a substitute for sensor confirmation.
Section 04
CROSS-SENSITIVITIES AND INTERFERENCES
| Interfering Gas | Effect on NO₂ Channel | Operational Note |
|---|---|---|
| NO (Nitric Oxide) | Significant positive — NO oxidizes to NO₂ at the electrode surface in some sensor designs, causing the NO₂ channel to overread in high-NO environments | Fresh fire atmospheres with high NO will cause NO₂ channel to overread. Use dedicated NO sensor alongside NO₂ when both are expected. |
| Cl₂ | Positive — Cl₂ is reduced at the NO₂ cathode electrode, generating false signal | Water treatment and swimming pool environments; if Cl₂ is suspected, NO₂ channel readings are unreliable |
| SO₂ | Some positive cross-sensitivity in certain sensor designs | Post-fire sulfurous combustion products; verify with manufacturer specification |
| CO | Minimal — CO is not an oxidizing gas and does not affect NO₂ cathodic reduction | Generally acceptable cross-sensitivity |
| H₂S | Minimal to none in NO₂ selective sensors | Generally acceptable; confirm with instrument specification |
Effect of NO₂ on Other Sensor Channels
- O₂ sensor: Like Cl₂, NO₂ may contribute to the O₂ channel current — causing slight O₂ overread in high NO₂ environments (though this effect is less pronounced than Cl₂)
- Cl₂ sensor: NO₂ causes a positive reading on Cl₂ sensors — in a post-fire environment, a spurious Cl₂ alarm may be NO₂ cross-sensitivity
- Always evaluate all channels in context when multiple oxidizing gases may be present simultaneously
Section 05
FAILURE MODES AND LIMITATIONS
Slow Response in Real-World Conditions
NO₂ is moderately water-soluble and may partially dissolve in condensed moisture on sensor membranes or sample tubing. This slows response time, particularly in post-fire environments with steam or high humidity. The T90 may be 2–3× the specification in wet conditions — approach cautiously and allow extra dwell time for accurate readings.
Oxidizer Poisoning
High-concentration NO₂, Cl₂, or O₃ exposure can permanently degrade the NO₂ sensor working electrode. Post-incident bump testing is mandatory. Sensors exposed to significant oxidizing gas loads should be replaced rather than trusted for subsequent life-safety entries.
Low-Concentration Detection Limit
The ACGIH TLV-TWA for NO₂ is 0.2 ppm — many field instruments have detection limits of 0.5–1 ppm, meaning they CANNOT alarm at the TLV. Know your instrument's lower detection limit. An instrument reading 0 ppm does not confirm absence of NO₂ at health-relevant concentrations during overhaul operations.
Temperature and Pressure
Post-fire environments with elevated temperatures can affect electrochemical kinetics. Cold weather operations slow response. Most instruments apply temperature compensation, but verify operating range specifications before winter structural fire deployments.
Section 06
FIELD OPERATIONS AND BEST PRACTICES
Structure Fire Overhaul
- NO₂ monitoring during overhaul is as important as CO monitoring — do not assume low CO means safe for SCBA removal
- NO₂ concentrations can remain elevated or increase during the overhaul phase as hot gases cool and NO converts to NO₂
- SCBA must be maintained during all overhaul operations until atmospheric monitoring confirms levels below ACGIH TLV (0.2 ppm TLV-TWA, 1 ppm STEL)
- Verify instrument detection limit — if your meter cannot detect below 1 ppm, it cannot confirm TLV compliance
Post-Blast Entry Clearance
- Delay all entries until brown discoloration has visibly cleared AND NO₂ sensor reads below 1 ppm for minimum 3 minutes
- Sample at multiple locations including low areas — NO₂ is heavier than air
- Ventilate before personnel entry; positive pressure ventilation with clean-air supply
Agricultural Silo Operations
- Fresh silos (within 2 weeks of filling) should be treated as IDLH atmospheres without monitoring
- Do not enter silos until a minimum of 3 weeks after filling, ventilated, and monitored to confirm NO₂ below action levels
- NO₂ accumulates at the grain surface and bottom of the silo — sample at multiple heights
- Rescue of an unconscious worker inside a silo is a Technician-level confined space operation
Section 07
REGULATIONS AND STANDARDS
| Agency | Limit | Value | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| OSHA | PEL | 5 ppm | Ceiling (29 CFR 1910.1000 Table Z-1) |
| NIOSH | REL | 1 ppm | STEL (15-min ceiling) |
| ACGIH | TLV-TWA | 0.2 ppm | Time-weighted average |
| ACGIH | TLV-STEL | 1 ppm | Short-term (15-min) |
| NIOSH | IDLH | 20 ppm | Immediately Dangerous |
| EPA | NAAQS Annual | 53 ppb (0.053 ppm) | Annual average — ambient air standard |
Section 08
KNOWLEDGE CHECK
Question 1 of 6
A firefighter removes SCBA during overhaul when the CO reading drops to 8 ppm and the NO₂ sensor reads 1.5 ppm. Which statement is correct?
Question 2 of 6
A brown/orange cloud is observed near the site of an explosive detonation. What does this indicate?
Question 3 of 6
Why can NO₂ concentrations INCREASE during the overhaul/cooling phase of a structure fire compared to the active-fire phase?
Question 4 of 6
A farm worker entered a recently filled grain silo to check on the silage. He came out quickly complaining of eye irritation but feeling "mostly OK." What is the appropriate response?
Question 5 of 6
The ACGIH TLV-TWA for NO₂ is 0.2 ppm. Your field instrument's lowest detection limit is 1 ppm and it reads 0.0 ppm. What does this mean?
Question 6 of 6
High-concentration NO₂ exposure can cause methemoglobinemia. Which of the following correctly describes this condition?