☣️ UN 1746 • CLASS 5

UN 1746 — Bromine trifluoride

Placard: Oxidizer. ERG Guide 144. Training/quick-reference only — use current ERG + SOP/SOG for incident-specific actions.

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⚠️ This page is a quick-reference aid. For real incidents: stage upwind, isolate, deny entry, request Hazmat early, and consult the current ERG + SOP/SOG.

UN 1746 is Bromine trifluoride, a strong oxidizing interhalogen liquid assigned to ERG Guide 144. It is highly corrosive and reacts violently with water, releasing toxic fluoride and bromide fumes.

Hazard overview: UN 1746 presents oxidizer, water-reactive, toxic fume and corrosive liquid hazards. It can ignite combustibles, react with common materials and create severe HF/HBr-type exposure risks.

Response guidance: For a UN 1746 incident, responders should verify the product with shipping papers, package markings, SDS and ERG Guide 144. Establish incident command, isolate the area, stay upwind, prevent incompatible contact, control runoff and choose entry or fire-control actions based on monitoring, SDS and local SOP.

Firefighter training notes: Training for UN 1746 should emphasize interhalogen oxidizer behavior, violent water reaction, HF/HBr/HCl fume hazards, incompatible materials, withdrawal decisions and dry-agent limitations. Use ERG 144, SDS and hazmat SOP.

Regulatory context: Bromine trifluoride is regulated as a hazardous material for transportation and emergency response purposes. Transportation, workplace exposure, spill reporting, waste handling, storage and environmental requirements may vary by concentration, formulation, quantity and jurisdiction. Verify current requirements through shipping papers, SDS, facility documents and applicable DOT, OSHA, EPA, NFPA, state or local authority guidance.

Storage & handling: Bromine trifluoride should be stored in compatible pressure or corrosion-resistant containers under strict oxidizer/reactive-material controls, away from water, fuels, organics, reducing agents, metals where incompatible, heat and unauthorized access. Storage should follow SDS, facility hazmat engineering controls and emergency planning.

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UN 1746 Quick Details

UN 1746
Product name: Bromine trifluoride
DOT Class: 5
Placard type: Oxidizer
ERG Guide: 144 (check current ERG)
Initial isolation: ERG 144: Initial isolation 100m in all directions. Protective action distance: 300m daytime, 800m nighttime for small spills; 800m daytime, 2.5km nighttime for large spills.

Common Hazards of UN 1746

  • STRONG OXIDIZER and highly corrosive interhalogen compound.
  • May ignite combustibles such as wood, paper, oil, clothing, packaging and contaminated absorbents.
  • Reacts violently or explosively with water, releasing toxic and corrosive hydrogen fluoride and hydrogen bromide fumes.
  • Can react dangerously with fuels, organic materials, metals, reducing agents and many common materials.
  • Vapors are heavy and irritating and may collect in low or confined areas.
  • Containers may rupture or explode when heated.
  • Runoff may create fire, explosion, toxic and corrosive contamination hazards.

Chemical Identity & Physical Properties

Colorless to pale yellow fuming liquid with a pungent, irritating odor. Highly reactive and corrosive. Hydrolyzes violently in moist air producing dense white fumes.

Also known asBromine fluorideBrF3TrifluorobromineBromine(III) fluoride
CAS Number7787-71-5
AppearanceColorless to pale yellow fuming liquid with a pungent, irritating odor. Highly reactive and corrosive. Hydrolyzes violently in moist air producing dense white fumes.
Flash PointNot applicable (strong oxidizer, not flammable itself)
Boiling Point127°C (261°F)
Vapor Density4.8 (much heavier than air)
Water ReactivityReacts violently and explosively with water, producing toxic and corrosive hydrogen fluoride and hydrogen bromide gases. Never use water directly.
Chemical details are general reference only. Always verify with current SDS, ERG, and SOP/SOG.

Fireground Response Guidance — UN 1746

Extinguishing Media

Use dry chemical, dry sand, soda ash or compatible dry media only when directed by incident command. Do not use water, foam or CO2 directly because violent reaction and toxic/corrosive fumes may result.

PPE Requirements

⚠️ Level A required; full encapsulating chemical protective suit with SCBA. Material must resist hydrofluoric acid. Bromine trifluoride permeates many materials.

Use positive-pressure SCBA and chemical protective clothing selected by hazmat specialists. Level A may be needed for close entry, unknown concentrations or liquefied gas/vapor contact because toxic, corrosive and heavy-vapor hazards may be severe.

Isolation & Evacuation

ERG 144: Initial isolation 100m in all directions. Protective action distance: 300m daytime, 800m nighttime for small spills; 800m daytime, 2.5km nighttime for large spills.
Always confirm protective actions with the current edition of the Emergency Response Guidebook (ERG Guide 144).

First Actions for a UN 1746 Incident

  • CALL 911. Then call the emergency response telephone number on the shipping paper, if available.
  • Keep unauthorized personnel away.
  • Stay upwind, uphill and/or upstream.
  • Avoid breathing vapors, fumes, dust, mist or gas and avoid skin or eye contact.
  • Keep fuels, organics, reducing agents and contaminated absorbents away from the material.
  • Keep water and moisture away from released product unless incident command confirms a compatible cooling or control use.
  • Do not touch or walk through spilled material unless properly trained and wearing appropriate protective equipment.
  • Ventilate closed spaces before entering, but only if properly trained, equipped, monitored and authorized by incident command.
  • Isolate the spill or leak area and expand the perimeter if vapor, gas, dust, fire involvement, water reaction or unknown concentration is present.
  • Use ERG Guide 144, shipping papers, SDS, air monitoring and incident command for protective actions.
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📋 Copy & Share Field Card

UN 1746 — Bromine trifluoride
HAZMAT RADIO NOTE — UN 1746 Product: Bromine trifluoride Class 5 / Oxidizer / ERG 144 PPE: Level A required; full encapsulating chemical protective suit with SCBA. Material must resist hydrofluoric acid. Bromine trifluoride permeates many materials. ISOLATION: ERG 144: Initial isolation 100m in all directions. Protective action distance: 300m daytime, 800m nighttime for small spills; 800m daytime, 2.5km nighttime for large spills. ACTION: Stage upwind · Isolate · Deny entry · Request HazmatRADIO

Use for: Quick radio or face-to-face size-up. Short, structured, field-ready.

SMS WhatsApp
=== IC HAZMAT BRIEFING === UN 1746 — Bromine trifluoride Class: 5 | Placard: Oxidizer | ERG Guide: 144 Appearance: Colorless to pale yellow fuming liquid with a pungent, irritating odor. Highly reactive and corrosive. Hydrolyzes violently in moist air producing dense white fumes. Water Reactivity: Reacts violently and explosively with water, producing toxic and corrosive hydrogen fluoride and hydrogen bromide gases. Never use water directly. Extinguishing: Use dry chemical, dry sand, soda ash or compatible dry media only when directed by incident command. Do not use water, foam or CO2 directly because violent reaction and toxic/corrosive fumes may result. PPE: Level A required; full encapsulating chemical protective suit with SCBA. Material must resist hydrofluoric acid. Bromine trifluoride permeates many materials. Isolation: ERG 144: Initial isolation 100m in all directions. Protective action distance: 300m daytime, 800m nighttime for small spills; 800m daytime, 2.5km nighttime for large spills. — Key Hazards — • STRONG OXIDIZER and highly corrosive interhalogen compound. • May ignite combustibles such as wood, paper, oil, clothing, packaging and contaminated absorbents. • Reacts violently or explosively with water, releasing toxic and corrosive hydrogen fluoride and hydrogen bromide fumes. — First Actions — • CALL 911. Then call the emergency response telephone number on the shipping paper, if available. • Keep unauthorized personnel away. • Stay upwind, uphill and/or upstream. • Avoid breathing vapors, fumes, dust, mist or gas and avoid skin or eye contact. SOURCE: allfirefighter.com/hazmat/un/bromine-trifluoride-un-1746 | Always use current ERG + SOP/SOGIC BRIEFING

Use for: Incident command briefing, staging area whiteboard, or pre-entry team brief.

SMS (short)
UN1746 Bromine trifluoride Cls5 ERG144 | allfirefighter.com/hazmat/un/bromine-trifluoride-un-1746SMS / 160 CHAR

Use for: Quick text to command or incoming units. Fits in a single SMS.

⚠️ Quick-reference only. Always use current ERG + SOP/SOG for incident-specific actions. Page: https://allfirefighter.com/hazmat/un/bromine-trifluoride-un-1746

Related UN Numbers in Class 5

Discovery block for training / quick reference. Always consult the current ERG + your SOP/SOG for operations.
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Frequently Asked Questions about UN 1746

UN 1746 is Bromine trifluoride, a hazardous material assigned to ERG Guide 144.

No. It is not a fuel, but it is a powerful oxidizer that can ignite combustibles and intensify fire.

ERG Guide 144 applies to UN 1746 for initial isolation, protective actions and first response guidance.

UN 1746 presents oxidizer, water-reactive, toxic fume and corrosive liquid hazards. It can ignite combustibles, react with common materials and create severe HF/HBr-type exposure risks.

Use positive-pressure SCBA and chemical protective clothing selected by hazmat specialists. Level A may be needed for close entry, unknown concentrations or liquefied gas/vapor contact because toxic, corrosive and heavy-vapor hazards may be severe.

Water or moist air can generate heat and toxic/corrosive fumes. Direct water application should follow ERG, SDS and incident command because reaction or runoff can worsen exposure.
Sources (high level): DOT/PHMSA marking & class concepts + ERG usage principles. This page does not reproduce ERG guide text—always consult the current ERG for incident-specific protective actions.