The
destruction of stockpiles or unexploded ammunitions of nitrogen mustard
(tris(2-chloroethyl)amine, HN-3) requires the development of safe
processes. The thermal destruction of this kind of compound is one
of the most efficient method of destruction. Because of the high-level
of toxicity of this chemical, there is a considerable lack of knowledge
on the chemical kinetics at high temperatures. In this study, a detailed
chemical kinetic model for the pyrolysis of nitrogen mustard gas is
developed based on a large number of thermokinetic parameters calculated
with theoretical chemistry. The thermal decomposition of HN-3 is shown
to mainly proceed through stepwise dechlorination with Cl-atom being
the principal chain carrier. The successive losses of chlorine atom
mainly lead to unsaturated amines without chlorine groups. Theoretical
calculations demonstrated that the thermal decomposition of these
compounds ultimately lead to the formation of pyrrole, which can accumulate
at low temperature. At higher temperatures, pyrrole yields HCN and
acetylene. Simulations also predict that about 52% of the total flux
of decomposition of HN-3 leads to the formation of N,N-diethenyl-2-chloroethylamine (P29), which acts
as a chain branching agent because its unimolecular decomposition
is preponderant and produces one chlorine and one hydrogen atoms.
Comparisons with the simulated reactivity of sulfur mustard gas are
also performed and show that HN-3 is more reactive that the former
toxic. The higher number of chlorine atoms in HN-3 compared to sulfur
mustard (3 vs 2) and the formation of the chain branching intermediate
P29 during its decomposition explain this behavior.