☣️ UN 1051 • CLASS 6.1

UN 1051 — Hydrogen cyanide, stabilized

Placard: Poison. ERG Guide 117. Training/quick-reference only — use current ERG + SOP/SOG for incident-specific actions.

🚒☣️
⚠️ Verification required: Broad or variable material category; verify exact product, SDS and shipping papers.
⚠️ 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 1051 is Hydrogen cyanide, stabilized, an extremely toxic flammable material assigned to ERG Guide 117. Rapid inhalation toxicity and skin absorption require strict control.

Hazard overview: EXTREMELY TOXIC and FLAMMABLE liquid/vapor; inhalation, ingestion or skin absorption may be fatal. Vapors may form explosive mixtures with air and can ignite from heat, sparks or flames. Vapor is slightly lighter than air but can behave unpredictably in wind, temperature gradients or confined spaces.

Response guidance: For UN 1051, isolate immediately, eliminate ignition sources and avoid all skin/vapor exposure. Use Level A/SCBA where needed and contain cyanide runoff under ERG 117.

Firefighter training notes: Training for UN 1051 should emphasize rapid toxic exposure, skin absorption, antidote/medical coordination, Level A decisions, decontamination and runoff control. Use ERG 117, SDS and local SOP.

Regulatory context: Hydrogen cyanide, stabilized is regulated as a hazardous material for transport and emergency response. Storage, reporting, exposure, waste and incident-notification duties depend on quantity, concentration, package type and jurisdiction; verify shipping papers, SDS and authority guidance.

Storage & handling: Hydrogen cyanide, stabilized should be stored in approved tightly closed containers away from heat, ignition sources, acids, oxidizers and incompatible materials, with ventilation and cyanide emergency planning.

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UN 1051 Quick Details

UN 1051
Product name: Hydrogen cyanide, stabilized
DOT Class: 6.1
Placard type: Poison
ERG Guide: 117 (check current ERG)
Initial isolation: ERG 117: small spill isolate 300m; large spill evacuate 1600m downwind

Common Hazards of UN 1051

  • EXTREMELY TOXIC and FLAMMABLE liquid/vapor; inhalation, ingestion or skin absorption may be fatal.
  • Vapors may form explosive mixtures with air and can ignite from heat, sparks or flames.
  • Vapor is slightly lighter than air but can behave unpredictably in wind, temperature gradients or confined spaces.
  • High concentrations may cause rapid collapse; odor is not a reliable warning.
  • Contact with acids can increase release of toxic hydrogen cyanide vapor from cyanide-containing mixtures.
  • Fire may produce nitrogen oxides and toxic smoke.
  • Runoff may carry cyanide contamination and requires specialist control.

Chemical Identity & Physical Properties

Hydrogen cyanide, stabilized physical appearance should be verified from SDS, package labels and shipping papers.

Also known asHCNPrussic acidHydrocyanic acid
CAS Number74-90-8
Flash Point-17.8°C (0°F)
Boiling Point25.7°C (78°F)
Vapor Density0.9
Chemical details are general reference only. Always verify with current SDS, ERG, and SOP/SOG.

Fireground Response Guidance — UN 1051

Extinguishing Media

Use alcohol-resistant foam, dry chemical or CO2. Water spray may cool containers or reduce vapors from protection, but contain cyanide-contaminated runoff.

PPE Requirements

⚠️ Level A required — IDLH is 50 ppm, immediately fatal at 300 ppm

Use positive-pressure SCBA and chemical protective clothing; Level A may be needed for unknown concentration, heavy vapor, splash or skin-absorption risk.

Isolation & Evacuation

ERG 117: small spill isolate 300m; large spill evacuate 1600m downwind
Always confirm protective actions with the current edition of the Emergency Response Guidebook (ERG Guide 117).

First Actions for a UN 1051 Incident

  • Call 911 and the emergency response number on the shipping paper, if available.
  • Keep unauthorized personnel away and establish incident command.
  • Stay upwind, uphill and upstream.
  • Eliminate ignition sources if this can be done safely.
  • Avoid breathing vapor, gas, mist, smoke or fumes and avoid skin or eye contact.
  • Do not touch damaged containers or spilled material without proper training and PPE.
  • Prevent contaminated liquid, runoff and decontamination waste from spreading.
  • Ventilate confined spaces only after monitoring and only if properly trained and equipped.
  • Use ERG Guide 117, SDS, shipping papers and monitoring to set isolation, evacuation and entry decisions.
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📋 Copy & Share Field Card

UN 1051 — Hydrogen cyanide, stabilized
HAZMAT RADIO NOTE — UN 1051 Product: Hydrogen cyanide, stabilized Class 6.1 / Poison / ERG 117 PPE: Level A required — IDLH is 50 ppm, immediately fatal at 300 ppm ISOLATION: ERG 117: small spill isolate 300m; large spill evacuate 1600m downwind 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 1051 — Hydrogen cyanide, stabilized Class: 6.1 | Placard: Poison | ERG Guide: 117 Extinguishing: Use alcohol-resistant foam, dry chemical or CO2. Water spray may cool containers or reduce vapors from protection, but contain cyanide-contaminated runoff. PPE: Level A required — IDLH is 50 ppm, immediately fatal at 300 ppm Isolation: ERG 117: small spill isolate 300m; large spill evacuate 1600m downwind — Key Hazards — • EXTREMELY TOXIC and FLAMMABLE liquid/vapor; inhalation, ingestion or skin absorption may be fatal. • Vapors may form explosive mixtures with air and can ignite from heat, sparks or flames. • Vapor is slightly lighter than air but can behave unpredictably in wind, temperature gradients or confined spaces. — First Actions — • Call 911 and the emergency response number on the shipping paper, if available. • Keep unauthorized personnel away and establish incident command. • Stay upwind, uphill and upstream. • Eliminate ignition sources if this can be done safely. SOURCE: allfirefighter.com/hazmat/un/hydrogen-cyanide-stabilized-un-1051 | Always use current ERG + SOP/SOGIC BRIEFING

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

SMS (short)
UN1051 Hydrogen cyanide, stabilized Cls6.1 ERG117 | allfirefighter.com/hazmat/un/hydrogen-cyanide-stabilized-un-1051SMS / 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/hydrogen-cyanide-stabilized-un-1051
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Frequently Asked Questions about UN 1051

UN 1051 is Hydrogen cyanide, stabilized, assigned to ERG Guide 117.

Yes. Hydrogen cyanide, stabilized can ignite and vapors or gas may form explosive mixtures with air.

EXTREMELY TOXIC and FLAMMABLE liquid/vapor; inhalation, ingestion or skin absorption may be fatal. Vapors may form explosive mixtures with air and can ignite from heat, sparks or flames. Vapor is slightly lighter than air but can behave unpredictably in wind, temperature gradients or confined spaces.

Use positive-pressure SCBA and chemical protective clothing; Level A may be needed for unknown concentration, heavy vapor, splash or skin-absorption risk.

Use alcohol-resistant foam, dry chemical or CO2. Water spray may cool containers or reduce vapors from protection, but contain cyanide-contaminated runoff.

It can be rapidly fatal by inhalation or skin absorption, and odor cannot be relied on for warning.

Runoff can carry cyanide contamination and must be controlled for specialist cleanup.
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.