Sciencemadness Discussion Board

Copper hydroxide exposure

Bedlasky - 14-12-2020 at 12:43

Hi.

I bought some copper hydroxide. It was packed in normal PE bags, which you find in every shop. So I decided to put it in to better container. But it was clogging my funnel all the time, so it was pain in the ass. I had blue hands and I also breath some dust of copper hydroxide. I washed my hands well, but this is not what I am worry about. I am more worry about inhalation of dust. I don't think that I breathed huge amount of it, but still I had some copper hydroxide in nose and I cough little bit for a while. Have inhalation of copper hydroxide some consequences?

Oxy - 14-12-2020 at 12:58

You should be ok. As it's not very soluble it is less toxic than copper salts.

I highly recommend using a funnel with wide tube which is great for powders (and liquids also).


violet sin - 14-12-2020 at 13:07

I've not had a noticed reaction from breathing anything other than when measuring out cinnamon powder for weighting. Aside from spilling strong acids/bases on flesh that is. I've certainly breathed copper a stances from the metal to compounds. That's not to say you won't notice anything, but I'd not be worried personally. Hanging drywall for years I've definitely done more damage from making a living with fiberglass/gypsum dust in the air.

woelen - 14-12-2020 at 13:07

Copper is not particularly toxic for humans and the most toxic route is by ingestion. Inhaled insoluble dust of copper hydroxide will not be healthy, but I think that it is not much more harmful than any other inhaled inert dust. Ingested copper hydroxide (any copper salt) is more harmful, that can lead to intense nausea and vomiting. But if you do not suffer from nausea, then you should just be fine.

Fulmen - 14-12-2020 at 13:26

It might not be as bad as it could be, but it's not good for you and it was entirely avoidable. You might want to file this as a teachable moment, next time it could be something really bad.

B(a)P - 14-12-2020 at 14:59

It is unlikely to have contained much dust below 10 um. As a result your nose and airways would have filtered that majority of it out as evidenced by what you observed in your nose and the coughing. You would need prolonged exposure to quite visible dust for it to have a toxic effect. Short term exposure to the extent where you experience mild symptoms (usually fever and headache) will still not have a lasting effect, it will give your liver a bit of a work out, but assuming you are otherwise heathy it will not cause it any damage. The human body needs a little copper to function properly and is quite good at getting rid of an excess.

Fery - 14-12-2020 at 22:46

Insoluble dust with particles size > 0,5 um is caught at walls of airways, below 0,5 um enters lung alveoli, and most of it is expelled with respiratory mucus. If a trace of Cu(OH)2 dissolve in respiratory system by a reaction with some organic acids present there and enters human blood it will be only trace amount impossible to measure, much less than physiological level of Cu2+ in blood plasma (Cu2+ is essential microelement for some enzymes). There are some diseases when internal level of Cu2+ is high (it does not circulate as free Cu2+ but bound to ceruloplasmin) like Wilson disease (hepatolenticular degeneration) but this is not your case.
Here an interesting article about coal miners, they inhale 1000 g of coal dust during lifetime and no more than 40 g stay in lungs, but this is something else, coal dust is insoluble.
https://www.ccohs.ca/oshanswers/chemicals/lungs_dust.html?=u...
And here an article about dust deposition in respiratory system depending on particle size:
https://www.ccohs.ca/oshanswers/chemicals/how_do.html

zed - 7-2-2021 at 01:25

We like you. In the future, wear gloves and a mask.

If it was Beryllium Oxide, you would be irrevocably screwed.

Not that I haven't messed up a few times. Just not lately.