Sciencemadness Discussion Board

TMS-azide explosion at University of Minnesota

Metacelsus - 18-6-2014 at 15:48

Some trimethylsilyl azide exploded yesterday at the building where I intern. A grad student was trying to vacuum distill it, and was injured by glass shards. I was in the basement when it happened; the explosion was on the fourth floor, where I usually work. I could still hear it from the basement, and I most definitely heard the subsequent alarm.

Warning to all: Messing with azides can end badly (and TMS-azide is safer than hydrazoic acid).

[Edited on 18-6-2014 by Cheddite Cheese]

Brain&Force - 18-6-2014 at 15:51

It looks like hydrazoic acid was the culprit:

http://chemjobber.blogspot.com/2014/06/twitter-tms-azide-exp...

Metacelsus - 18-6-2014 at 16:03

Even if hydrazoic acid impurities initiated the explosion, TMS-azide is not off the hook.

TheChemiKid - 18-6-2014 at 16:10

To sum up: Azides are scary!
:D

zed - 3-7-2014 at 11:31

Jeeze. Stuff like that should be done at a special facility. No walls. Explosion barrier.

Must have know its potential to blow. So why?


mnick12 - 3-7-2014 at 15:59

It looks like it was about 200g of the stuff that exploded, I think the bigger issue is someone working with 200g of an azide! That is just dumb!

The Volatile Chemist - 3-7-2014 at 19:45

Right, my question is why?! Over an oz. would be nasty.