Hydrogen
cyanide
The deadly compound
that is notorious for its quick acting and poisonous properties
.
Some varieties of Cassava, which is a staple food of
500 million people, contain enough cyanide to kill six people per kilogram of
the crop. Fortunately though, the methods used to cook Cassava ensure that, if
done properly, a person eating a kilogram of Cassava will receive only
one-fifth the lethal dose of cyanide. The white roots must be soaked or boiled
in water, or fermented to remove the cyanide. This processing is often done
industrially to produce safe foodstuffs like cassava flour and tapioca.
BY
AKSHAT RATHI
Hydrogen cyanide is a very small, linear
molecule. It is simply H-C-N.
The carbon atom is connected to the
nitrogen by a strong triple bond, whereas the hydrogen is much more weakly
attached.
Hydrogen cyanide (HCN) poison molecule |
Plucking off the hydrogen atom leaves the negatively charged and highly reactive cyanide ion, CN-.
Cyanide is known to form strong bonds with
metals, and this property is exploited in purifying gold from its ore.
Gold ore is stirred in vats that contain a
solution of sodium cyanide to form soluble gold cyanide complexes.
Although very large amounts of this highly
poisonous material are used, there is nothing to fear because almost all of it
is recycled.
Nevertheless, the technique remains
controversial because of the risk of accidentally releasing large amounts of
highly toxic cyanide compounds into the environment.
Cyanide is one of the quickest acting
poisons, hence it is famously referred to many times in thriller stories, as a
murder weapon or in the form of a suicide pill given to secret agents in case
they are captured.
Its toxicity arises from the affinity of
the cyanide ion to iron atoms.
When cyanide ions are present in the human
body, they quickly bind to iron atoms inside cells.
In doing so, they inhibit an important
enzyme - cytochrome C oxidase, which occurs inside the energy-producing
mitochondria of a cell.
The enzyme is essential to life because it
catalyses the final stage of glucose oxidation.
When it is blocked, the source of energy
within the body quickly dries up, immediately affecting the central nervous
system and the heart.
Binding of cyanide to the iron atom is
irreversible in the sense that it can only be removed by chemical attack.
On cyanide consumption, within minutes the
victim becomes unconscious although continues breathing, and slowly the heart
gives out, causing death.
Hydrogen cyanide's action as poison is not
just restricted to the movies, though.
Some varieties of Cassava, which is a
staple food of 500 million people, contain enough cyanide to kill six people
per kilogram of the crop.
Fortunately though, the methods used to
cook Cassava ensure that, if done properly, a person eating a kilogram of
Cassava will receive only one-fifth the lethal dose of cyanide.
The white roots must be soaked or boiled in
water, or fermented to remove the cyanide.
This processing is often done industrially
to produce safe foodstuffs like cassava flour and tapioca.
Despite the availability of techniques that
allow for safe consumption, cyanide poisoning by Cassava became a common
problem in the 1980s, especially in the drought afflicted areas of Africa where
people were not willing to take the right measures to prepare Cassava before
consuming it.
Seeds of fruits like apples, cherries and
almonds also contain HCN, but in such small amounts that they pose no health
risks.
But as bad as cyanide poisoning seems, a
number of antidotes have been developed and their mechanism of action enables
the cyanide ion to latch on to another molecule instead of binding to the iron
atom in cytochrome oxidase.
One such sacrificial molecule which is
available in the human body is haemoglobin.
But to enable the iron atom in haemoglobin
to pick up the cyanide ion, it is necessary to oxidise Fe(II) to Fe(III).
This can be achieved by injecting either
sodium nitrite or 4-dimethylaminophenol.
Other sacrificial molecules that can be
introduced into the human body are hydroxycobalamin, a relative of vitamin B12
- or kelocyanor, which both employ cobalt to mop up cyanide ions.
Bearing this in mind, it could come as a surprise
that chemical industries around the world produce enough hydrogen cyanide every
month to kill every living person on Earth.
But of course, most of it is used to
produce a wide variety of organic compounds.
For example, adiponitrile - made by adding
HCN across the two double bonds of butadiene - is a precursor to the polymer
Nylon, which is used for a variety of applications from making composite
materials to being used as sutures after surgery.
It is also used to synthesise the
essential-to-life amino acids for commercial use.
The ability to easily form a plethora of
organic compounds, with many reagents and under a variety of conditions, has
made researchers think about hydrogen cyanide's role in the origin of life -
leading to an ongoing debate.
Those supporting the argument claim that
hydrogen cyanide could have well been formed by lightning discharges in the
prehistoric atmosphere of our planet.
The presence of other chemicals at the time
may have enabled the synthesis of the amino acids that form the basis of our
life.
Whichever way the debate goes, hydrogen cyanide is a fascinating molecule - maybe the giver, sometimes the taker, and in many ways today also the supporter of life.
Akshat Rathi is a London-based
reporter for Bloomberg News. He has a PhD in organic chemistry from the
University of Oxford, and a BTech in chemical engineering from the Institute of
Chemical Technology in Mumbai.
He
tells stories of the people and their ideas tackling the biggest problem facing
humanity: climate change. He has edited a book of essays from young climate
leaders and he is currently working on a book about scaling up climate
solutions.
Previously,
Akshat was a senior reporter at Quartz and a science editor at The
Conversation. He has also worked for The Economist and the Royal Society of
Chemistry. His writings have also been published in Nature, The Hindu, The
Guardian, Ars Technica, and Chemistry World, among others.
In
2020, Akshat was awarded the Distinguished Alumni Award by the Institute of
Chemical Technology and his Bloomberg Green newsletter Net Zero was a finalist
for an EPPY award. In 2019, he was shortlisted by the British Journalism Awards
for the best science journalism category. In 2018, Akshat won Journalist of the
Year at the Drum’s Online Media Awards ceremony, he was a finalist for the John
B. Oakes award for distinguished environmental journalism, and he was
shortlisted for British Science Writer of the Year by the Association of
British Science Writers.
https://www.chemistryworld.com/podcasts/hydrogen-cyanide/3005803.article
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