People injured in London Aquatics Centre gas leak.
Discussion
Someone not read the chlorine dosing instructions correctly?
You'd think it was automatic, so maybe a malfunction.
Chlorine inhalation can be quite nasty, even very short bouts of it.
A guy i know of mine got perm lung damage using limescale remover in a very scaled up confined shower space with insufficient ventilation. Collapsed in there and was in a bad way
You'd think it was automatic, so maybe a malfunction.
Chlorine inhalation can be quite nasty, even very short bouts of it.
A guy i know of mine got perm lung damage using limescale remover in a very scaled up confined shower space with insufficient ventilation. Collapsed in there and was in a bad way
bbc article said:
The fire service said the gas leak had been caused by a chemical reaction, causing a "high quantity of chlorine gas" to be released.
That'll either be a spillage causing liquid chlorine (sodium hypochlorite) and hydrochloric acid to mix, or someone has dosed the wrong chemical into the wrong storage/day tank.Very nasty indeed
Edited by Dr Interceptor on Wednesday 23 March 12:37
bbc said:
The pool is operated by Greenwich Leisure Limited (GLL), which said the release of gas occurred when "the facilities management company that operates the plant room took delivery of pool chemicals".
Yes, that makes it quite clear then.Or is it the official excuse for Russian sabotage.
Dr Interceptor said:
bbc article said:
The fire service said the gas leak had been caused by a chemical reaction, causing a "high quantity of chlorine gas" to be released.
That'll either be a spillage causing liquid chlorine (sodium hypochlorite) and hydrochloric acid to mix, or someone has dosed the wrong chemical into the wrong storage/day tank.Very nasty indeed
Edited by Dr Interceptor on Wednesday 23 March 12:37
It's crazy that this sort of thing still happens regularly. While I'm sure that there are extensive safety procedures in place, are they often ignored? Are there systems in place to make it physically impossible to spill or mix the chemicals incorrectly? Are there alarms such that if chlorine is detected above a certain level the centre is evacuated, and they don't simply wait for customers to pass out?
poo at Paul's said:
A guy i know of mine got perm lung damage using limescale remover in a very scaled up confined shower space with insufficient ventilation. Collapsed in there and was in a bad way
Were they mixing bleach and limescale remover? The limescale remover itself shouldn't release any harmful gases, but if you used bleach too, then yes.... chlorine...Edited by Gareth79 on Wednesday 23 March 15:14
Gareth79 said:
Are there alarms such that if chlorine is detected above a certain level the centre is evacuated, and they don't simply wait for customers to pass out?
Chlorine isn't the kind of gas that people ignore at sublethal levels until they pass out - you can smell it well below dangerous levels (<0.3ppm), at about ten times that level (3ppm) it will start to irritate your eyes and lungs, at another ten times that (30ppm) it will cause immediate chest pain and respiratory distress. 400ppm will kill you in half an hour, 1000ppm in minutes.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC31369...
otolith said:
Gareth79 said:
Are there alarms such that if chlorine is detected above a certain level the centre is evacuated, and they don't simply wait for customers to pass out?
Chlorine isn't the kind of gas that people ignore at sublethal levels until they pass out - you can smell it well below dangerous levels (<0.3ppm), at about ten times that level (3ppm) it will start to irritate your eyes and lungs, at another ten times that (30ppm) it will cause immediate chest pain and respiratory distress. 400ppm will kill you in half an hour, 1000ppm in minutes.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC31369...
dmahon said:
I go swimming a lot, but one time in ten the chlorine is overbearing, it burns your throat and I can’t stay in the jacuzzi area where there is less space for it to dissipate.
Always wondered how bad for your health that was?
Not wanting to take the thread off topic... but to answer your question, what you are breathing in there are chloramines. They are the result of chlorine particles combined with other particles like ammonias, fats, oils etc. This will always be more prevalent in high temperature public pools, spas, and anything that kids go in (because they piss in them). The water will need to be oxidised to release them and reduce the odour. The effect on your health will be fairly negligible in normal cases.Always wondered how bad for your health that was?
Dr Interceptor said:
dmahon said:
I go swimming a lot, but one time in ten the chlorine is overbearing, it burns your throat and I can’t stay in the jacuzzi area where there is less space for it to dissipate.
Always wondered how bad for your health that was?
Not wanting to take the thread off topic... but to answer your question, what you are breathing in there are chloramines. They are the result of chlorine particles combined with other particles like ammonias, fats, oils etc. This will always be more prevalent in high temperature public pools, spas, and anything that kids go in (because they piss in them). The water will need to be oxidised to release them and reduce the odour. The effect on your health will be fairly negligible in normal cases.Always wondered how bad for your health that was?
Isn't it the case that being able to smell 'chlorine' is actually a good thing as its showing its doing it's job
Gareth79 said:
It's crazy that this sort of thing still happens regularly. While I'm sure that there are extensive safety procedures in place, are they often ignored? Are there systems in place to make it physically impossible to spill or mix the chemicals incorrectly? Are there alarms such that if chlorine is detected above a certain level the centre is evacuated, and they don't simply wait for customers to pass out?
I think it was a limescale remover and a mould remover, (a well scabby shower on a house flip he was doing). There was an investigation as ambulance was called and police etc, and it was determined to be chlorine damage. Nasty stuff poo at Paul's said:
A guy i know of mine got perm lung damage using limescale remover in a very scaled up confined shower space with insufficient ventilation. Collapsed in there and was in a bad way
Were they mixing bleach and limescale remover? The limescale remover itself shouldn't release any harmful gases, but if you used bleach too, then yes.... chlorine...Edited by Gareth79 on Wednesday 23 March 15:14
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