UN 1587 — Copper cyanide
Placard: Toxic. ERG Guide 151. Training/quick-reference only — use current ERG + SOP/SOG for incident-specific actions.
UN 1587 is Copper cyanide, a highly toxic cyanide material assigned to ERG Guide 151. Water, moisture, acids or heat can release hydrogen cyanide, so air monitoring and runoff control are critical.
Hazard overview: UN 1587 presents cyanide poisoning, hydrogen cyanide gas and contaminated-runoff hazards. Avoid acid or water contact with product unless incident command confirms a safe control method, and do not rely on odor as a warning.
Response guidance: For a UN 1587 incident, responders should verify the product with shipping papers, package markings, SDS and ERG Guide 151. Establish incident command, isolate the area, stay upwind, prevent dust or vapor exposure, control runoff and choose entry or cleanup actions based on monitoring, SDS and local SOP.
Firefighter training notes: Training for UN 1587 should emphasize hydrogen cyanide generation, acid/water incompatibility, air monitoring, SCBA use, decontamination and medical coordination. Common errors include relying on odor, using acidic cleanup materials and allowing contaminated runoff to spread. Use ERG 151, SDS and local SOP.
Regulatory context: Copper cyanide is regulated as a toxic cyanide hazardous material and may trigger strict exposure, spill reporting, waste and emergency planning controls. Verify current requirements through shipping papers, SDS, facility documents and applicable DOT, OSHA, EPA, NFPA, state or local authority guidance.
Storage & handling: Copper cyanide should be stored in tightly closed compatible containers in a secure, dry, well-ventilated toxic-material area away from acids, water contamination, oxidizers, heat and unauthorized access. Storage should include cyanide emergency planning and runoff control appropriate to the SDS.
UN 1587 Quick Details
Common Hazards of UN 1587
- HIGHLY TOXIC cyanide material; inhalation, ingestion or skin contact may be fatal.
- Water, moisture, acids or heat may release hydrogen cyanide gas.
- Hydrogen cyanide can be flammable and rapidly dangerous in low or poorly ventilated areas.
- Fire may produce hydrogen cyanide, nitrogen oxides and other toxic gases.
- Runoff, absorbents and contaminated equipment may carry cyanide hazards.
- Containers may rupture or fail when heated.
- Odor is not a reliable warning for hydrogen cyanide exposure.
Chemical Identity & Physical Properties
White to cream-colored odorless powder or crystalline solid at room temperature. May have a faint almond-like odor if decomposing or contaminated with hydrogen cyanide.
| Also known as | Cuprous cyanideCopper(I) cyanideCupricinCyanure de cuivre |
| CAS Number | 544-92-3 |
| Appearance | White to cream-colored odorless powder or crystalline solid at room temperature. May have a faint almond-like odor if decomposing or contaminated with hydrogen cyanide. |
| Flash Point | Not applicable (non-combustible solid) |
| Boiling Point | Not applicable (decomposes before boiling) |
| Vapor Density | Not applicable (solid) |
| Water Reactivity | Slowly decomposes in water releasing toxic hydrogen cyanide gas, especially in acidic conditions |
Fireground Response Guidance — UN 1587
Extinguishing Media
PPE Requirements
Use positive-pressure SCBA and chemical protective clothing selected by hazmat specialists for cyanide dust, liquid, vapor or fire exposure. Level A may be needed for close entry or unknown hydrogen cyanide concentrations; decontamination should follow SDS and incident command.
Isolation & Evacuation
First Actions for a UN 1587 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 or mist and avoid all skin or eye contact.
- Avoid water, acids or incompatible cleanup materials contacting the product unless incident command confirms a safe control method.
- Do not touch or walk through spilled material unless properly trained and wearing appropriate protective equipment.
- Monitor for hydrogen cyanide where available; odor is not a reliable warning.
- 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, dust, fire involvement or unknown concentration is present.
- Use ERG Guide 151, shipping papers, SDS, air monitoring and incident command for protective actions.
📋 Copy & Share Field Card
UN 1587 — Copper cyanideUse for: Quick radio or face-to-face size-up. Short, structured, field-ready.
Use for: Incident command briefing, staging area whiteboard, or pre-entry team brief.
Use for: Quick text to command or incoming units. Fits in a single SMS.