⚠ DISCLAIMER: Educational use only. Not a substitute for manufacturer documentation or formal hazmat training.
Sensor Module 12 · Praxis Training LLC

PHOSPHINE
PH₃ SENSOR
MASTERY

Electrochemical Oxidation · Fumigant Gas · No Antidote · Shipping Container Hazard

0.02 ppm
ACGIH TLV-TWA
50 ppm
IDLH
No
Antidote Available
AlP
Primary Field Source

PHOSPHINE FUNDAMENTALS

Phosphine (PH₃) is a colorless, flammable, extremely toxic gas with a faint odor variously described as "rotten fish," "garlic," or "decaying grain." It is primarily encountered as a fumigant gas generated from metal phosphide tablets — most commonly aluminum phosphide (AlP) and zinc phosphide (Zn₃P₂) — which are used worldwide to fumigate shipping containers, grain storage facilities, and agricultural commodities. PH₃ is also produced as a byproduct in semiconductor manufacturing and certain industrial chemical processes.

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Odor Is NOT a Reliable Warning Property

Phosphine's odor threshold is highly variable — some individuals cannot detect it at all. The ACGIH TLV-TWA (0.02 ppm) is at or below the reliable detection threshold for most people. Do not rely on odor to determine PH₃ presence or safe entry conditions. Instrument monitoring is mandatory.

Primary Sources in Hazmat Operations

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Shipping Container Fumigation

AlP or Zn₃P₂ tablets are placed inside ISO shipping containers before sealing for international transit to kill insects and rodents. Residual tablets react with moisture upon container opening. This is the most common hazmat PH₃ exposure scenario for first responders. Dock workers, customs inspectors, and cargo handlers are at high risk.

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Grain Silo and Storage Fumigation

AlP fumigant pellets are placed in grain bins, silos, and storage facilities to protect against insect infestation. PH₃ accumulates in enclosed spaces. Maintenance workers and agricultural personnel entering fumigated spaces without monitoring are at high fatality risk. PH₃-related fatalities in grain storage are a documented, recurring hazard.

Semiconductor / Chemical Manufacturing

PH₃ is used as a dopant gas in semiconductor fabrication (phosphorus doping of silicon wafers) and as a chemical precursor. Industrial facilities using cylinders of pure PH₃ represent a fixed-facility hazmat scenario distinct from fumigant-generated PH₃.

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Rodenticide Tablets (Incidental)

Zn₃P₂-based rodenticide is used in pest control. When these tablets are encountered in a fire, they can react with water or moisture to generate PH₃. Fire suppression activities can inadvertently cause PH₃ generation in occupied structures that used zinc phosphide rodenticide.

Physical and Chemical Properties

PropertyValueOperational Significance
Molecular Weight34 g/molHeavier than air (air = 29 g/mol) — accumulates in low areas, ship holds, container floors
LEL1.8%Flammable at 18,000 ppm — this is 360× the IDLH; explosion risk exists at concentrations where responders are already in life-safety danger
UEL98%Extremely wide flammable range — essentially flammable at nearly any mixture ratio above LEL
OdorRotten fish / garlicUnreliable below hazardous concentrations — do NOT use odor as warning property
Vapor Density1.17 (air = 1)Slightly heavier than air — sample at floor level in enclosed spaces
ReactivityReacts with moistureAlP + H₂O generates PH₃ — humidity accelerates generation from residual tablets

HOW THE PH₃ SENSOR WORKS

Phosphine is detected using a 3-electrode amperometric electrochemical sensor. PH₃ is an electron donor and undergoes oxidation at the working electrode (anode). This is the same general detection mechanism as CO and H₂S — oxidation at the anode generates current proportional to PH₃ concentration.

Working electrode (oxidation):  PH₃ + 4H₂O → H₃PO₄ + 8H⁺ + 8e⁻
Counter electrode (reduction):  2O₂ + 8H⁺ + 8e⁻ → 4H₂O
-- PH₃ is oxidized to phosphoric acid at the anode
-- 8 electrons released per molecule — high sensitivity possible
-- Output current is proportional to PH₃ concentration

Generation Chemistry — AlP + Water

Understanding the source chemistry is essential for predicting PH₃ behavior at a scene. Aluminum phosphide tablets do not release PH₃ spontaneously — they require moisture. The rate of generation depends on humidity, temperature, and how much residual unreacted AlP remains.

AlP + 3H₂O → Al(OH)₃ + PH₃↑
-- One mole AlP generates one mole PH₃ on contact with moisture
-- Reaction rate accelerates in high humidity (tropical climates, rain, condensation)
-- Residual unreacted tablets can continue generating PH₃ for hours to days
-- "Spent" tablets (gray/white powder) indicate complete reaction
Zn₃P₂ + 6H₂O → 3Zn(OH)₂ + 2PH₃↑
-- Zinc phosphide follows same moisture-activation principle
Residual Tablet Risk — "Spent" Does Not Mean "Safe"

Partially reacted AlP tablets (yellowish-green residue) still contain unreacted material. Adding water during decontamination or firefighting operations can restart PH₃ generation. Dry methods should be used to collect phosphide residuals — do not apply water directly to unreacted tablets. Contact your local hazmat team for disposal procedures.

HEALTH EFFECTS AND TOXICOLOGY

Phosphine is one of the most acutely toxic gases encountered in hazmat operations. It causes multi-organ damage affecting the lungs, heart, liver, and kidneys simultaneously. Unlike many toxic gases that act via a single mechanism, PH₃ causes diffuse cellular toxicity by inhibiting cytochrome c oxidase (the same enzyme inhibited by HCN) and generating free radicals that damage cell membranes. There is no specific antidote — treatment is entirely supportive.

ConcentrationEffectTime Frame
0.02 ppmACGIH TLV-TWA — maximum permissible 8-hr exposure8-hour workday
0.1 ppmNIOSH ceiling — odor may be faintly detectable by some individualsCeiling (any duration)
0.3 ppmOSHA PEL ceiling — legal maximum for workersCeiling (any duration)
1–5 ppmHeadache, dizziness, nausea, weakness — symptoms may onset 30–60 minutes post-exposureDelayed onset
5–20 ppmSevere headache, pulmonary irritation, cardiac arrhythmias; liver enzyme elevationRapid to delayed
50 ppmIDLH — severe pulmonary edema, cardiac dysfunction, possible deathShort-term
>200 ppmPotentially rapidly fatal — profound multi-organ failureMinutes

Multi-Organ Toxicity Pattern

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Pulmonary Effects

Non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema; chemical pneumonitis; acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). PH₃ reacts with water in lung tissue to form phosphorous and hypophosphorous acids, causing direct chemical burns to alveolar membranes.

Cardiovascular Effects

Cardiac arrhythmias (including ventricular fibrillation), hypotension, myocardial damage. Cardiovascular effects can be the primary cause of death. ECG changes appear early and persistent cardiac monitoring is mandatory post-exposure.

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Hepatic and Renal Effects

Elevated liver enzymes (AST, ALT) reflecting hepatocellular damage; elevated creatinine and BUN reflecting acute kidney injury. These effects may not be clinically apparent until 24–72 hours after exposure, necessitating extended medical monitoring.

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CNS Effects

Headache, tremor, ataxia, convulsions at high concentrations. CNS effects result from cellular hypoxia (cytochrome inhibition) rather than direct neurotoxicity. Loss of consciousness can occur rapidly at high concentrations.

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No Antidote — Supportive Care Only

Unlike cyanide (where hydroxocobalamin or sodium nitrite/thiosulfate are antidotes) or organophosphate poisoning (atropine/pralidoxime), there is no pharmacological antidote for phosphine poisoning. Treatment consists of: immediate removal from exposure, 100% supplemental oxygen, mechanical ventilation for respiratory failure, cardiac monitoring and antiarrhythmic therapy as needed, and supportive treatment for hepatic and renal effects. Early hospital evaluation is mandatory for all significant exposures — symptoms may be delayed 30–60 minutes from exposure.

CROSS-SENSITIVITIES AND INTERFERENCES

Interfering GasEffect on PH₃ ChannelOperational Note
AsH₃ (Arsine)Strong positive — arsine undergoes the same anode oxidation mechanism; most PH₃ sensors will respond to AsH₃ with little selectivityIn metallurgical settings where both gases may be present, individual channel readings cannot reliably differentiate PH₃ from AsH₃. Both are severely toxic — the cross-sensitivity does not reduce the alarm significance.
H₂SModerate positive — H₂S also undergoes anodic oxidation; causes PH₃ sensor to overread in H₂S-containing atmospheresGrain storage and agricultural settings may contain both H₂S (decaying organic matter) and PH₃ (fumigant). If H₂S is present, PH₃ readings may be inflated. Requires dedicated H₂S sensor to interpret PH₃ channel correctly.
COMinimal cross-sensitivity in most PH₃ selective sensorsGenerally acceptable — CO cross-sensitivity is typically filtered by sensor design
NO₂Minimal — NO₂ undergoes cathodic reduction and does not affect the anode-based PH₃ sensorGenerally acceptable cross-sensitivity
SO₂Low positive in some sensor designsVerify with instrument specification sheet for your specific device
AsH₃ / PH₃ Cross-Sensitivity — Both Are IDLH-Level Hazards

In scenarios where arsine and phosphine might coexist (smelting operations, semiconductor facilities), the cross-sensitivity between channels is operationally significant. However, from a life-safety perspective, both gases are severely toxic at similar concentration levels. If either PH₃ or AsH₃ is suspected, treat the atmosphere as requiring SCBA and IDLH-level protection regardless of which specific gas is indicated — the cross-sensitivity does not make either reading safe to ignore.

FAILURE MODES AND LIMITATIONS

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High-Concentration Sensor Poisoning

Exposure to very high PH₃ concentrations (hundreds of ppm) can irreversibly saturate and degrade the electrochemical working electrode. A sensor that survived a high-concentration event may show depressed response, read-low, or fail to alarm on subsequent exposures. Post-incident bump testing is mandatory. Do not return to service without confirmed bump test pass.

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Humidity Effects

PH₃ sensors can be affected by wide swings in relative humidity. The sensor electrolyte concentration changes with humidity, altering sensitivity. Very high RH (approaching 100%, as found inside recently opened shipping containers) can temporarily suppress sensor response or cause erratic readings. Allow the instrument to equilibrate before relying on readings in high-humidity environments.

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Detection Limit vs. TLV Gap

The ACGIH TLV-TWA of 0.02 ppm is extremely low. Many general-purpose 4-gas instruments have PH₃ detection limits of 0.05–0.1 ppm, meaning they cannot alarm at the TLV. Dedicated PH₃ monitors with lower detection limits are required to confirm TLV compliance. A zero reading does not mean TLV compliance if your instrument's range starts at 0.1 ppm.

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Temperature Effects

Cold temperature slows electrochemical reaction kinetics, potentially reducing sensitivity. Container inspections in cold climates (refrigerated containers, winter environments) may yield slower sensor response and possible under-reading. Allow warm-up time and verify sensor response against known concentration (bump test) before cold-weather operations.

FIELD OPERATIONS AND BEST PRACTICES

Shipping Container Entry Protocol

Grain Storage and Agricultural Operations

Residual Tablet Handling

Flammability — Wide Range, IDLH Threshold Far Below LEL

PH₃ has a LEL of 1.8% (18,000 ppm) and a UEL of 98%. The IDLH is 50 ppm — 360 times below the LEL. You will incapacitate or kill unprotected responders long before reaching explosive concentrations. The flammability hazard is secondary in most PH₃ response scenarios but must be considered in enclosed spaces with high AlP loads (fumigation tents, sealed container interiors with large tablet residuals).

REGULATIONS AND STANDARDS

AgencyLimit TypeValueNotes
ACGIHTLV-TWA0.02 ppm8-hr TWA — most protective exposure limit; often below instrument detection limits
NIOSHREL Ceiling0.1 ppmCeiling — not to be exceeded at any time
OSHAPEL Ceiling0.3 ppm29 CFR 1910.1000 Table Z-1 — regulatory ceiling limit
NIOSHIDLH50 ppmImmediately Dangerous — life-safety evacuation threshold
EPAERPG-20.5 ppm1-hour exposure threshold for irreversible health effects
DOTPlacardUN 2199Phosphine — Toxic Gas placard; Packing Group I; ERG Guide 119
NIOSH
Pocket Guide — Phosphine
IDLH 50 ppm. No antidote. NIOSH recommends SCBA for all emergency situations involving PH₃. Carcinogenicity: Not classified. Full-face SCBA required for IDLH atmospheres.
EPA
FIFRA — Fumigant Regulations
Aluminum phosphide products (AlP tablets/pellets) are federally restricted-use pesticides (RUP) requiring licensed applicators. Application, monitoring, and aeration procedures are specified by product label — label requirements are legally binding.
OSHA
29 CFR 1910.1000 / Maritime Standards
29 CFR 1915.1000 addresses fumigation in shipbuilding/repair. OSHA has issued multiple enforcement citations for container entry without PH₃ monitoring. Dock worker fatalities are the regulatory driver for current standards.
ERG 2024
Guide 119 — Phosphine / UN 2199
Initial isolation 100 m for small spill, 300 m for large. Downwind evacuation 0.6 km (day) / 2.0 km (night) for large spill. Flammable — keep from ignition sources. No water on spill.

KNOWLEDGE CHECK

Question 1 of 6

The OSHA PEL ceiling for phosphine is 0.3 ppm and the ACGIH TLV-TWA is 0.02 ppm. A responder's instrument reads 0.08 ppm PH₃ at a container inspection. Which statement is correct?

Question 2 of 6

A shipping container from an international port is opened and a faint fishy odor is noticed. The PH₃ sensor reads 0.0 ppm. What is the correct interpretation?

Question 3 of 6

During a container inspection, a responder finds greenish-yellow tablet residues on the floor. A firefighter suggests spraying the residues with water to neutralize them. What is the correct response?

Question 4 of 6

What is the antidote for phosphine poisoning?

Question 5 of 6

PH₃ has a LEL of 1.8% (18,000 ppm) and an IDLH of 50 ppm. What is the relationship between the explosive hazard and the toxicity hazard in most field scenarios?

Question 6 of 6

A PH₃ sensor that was recently exposed to >200 ppm phosphine during a container response passes the next morning's bump test with a 30% deflection instead of the usual 60–70%. What should you do?