Warning: Broken CFL's release mercury

sgr42o

Well-Known Member
Just a heads up for all those fellow CFL growers. A typical CFL contains about 5mg of mercury. If you're like me you usually have a fan running and 10+ CFL's in various poisitions in your grow room. All it takes is dropping a CFL, having the fan pointed your direction, and inhaling at that moment and you've potentially been subjected to mercury poisoning. I had a scenario like this happen tonight but luckily the fan was pointed a little to the side of me so it just got on my arms and clothing. The fact is these CFL's contain very little mercury, about 5mg, so unless you directly inhale that puff of dust when it breaks you should be OK assuming you take some proper precuations. Here's some tips for those who drop a CFL:

1. Turn off the fans when working with CFL's. When a CFL breaks the mercury turns into a gas and a fan spreads the gas in direction its pointed. If it's pointed at you you might get poisoned by it via inhaling the cloud. (Inhaling it is the worst case scenario. Getting it on your skin can still make you sick but shouldn't be too serious. If directly inhaled pay attention to any symptoms and worst case goto the ER. However, if you're having major issues TELL THEM ITS PROBABLY MERCURY POISONING. Lieing about it will obstruct their ability to help you. Obviously you don't need to tell them it happened in your illegal grow op; simply say you were changing a bulb.)

2. DON'T PICK UP BROKEN PIECES WITH BARE HANDS. Instead, use rubber gloves. The glass is covered in mercury and doing this is asking for mercury poisoning. While it won't kill you it may make you sick.

3. If you break a CFL on/near your plant consider killing it. (I'm a hypicrite though; I refused to kill my WW that was near it. The fan was blowing in the opposite direction of it and it broke a good foot away from the plant so I doubt it got any mercury on it.)

4. Clean your grow room as best as you can. Wipe down EVERYTHING with disinfecting wipes. Make sure you get rid of every last bit of the broken CFL.

5. Air out the grow area for eight hours. Put a fan at the door of it so it blows it into another room or out a window. Considering leaving the room for this period as well. While it's unlikely you'll get sick it's better safe than sorry. 5mg of mercury is very little and if its blown into other rooms it'll become so small of an amount over a large area that its not even toxic anymore.

Anyhow, I realize some may say this should be common sense by now but I figure it's worth mentioning for those who didn't already know about this.

Good luck everyone with your CFL grow!
 

grassified

Well-Known Member
Thanks for the useful information. Just today I broke my spare CFL bulb! It just chipped at the end a little bit, so theres a little hole in it about 1/8 of an inch wide. I picked up the 3-4 tiny peices with my hands, oops. Anyway I just threw it in the trashcan in my room, lol I should get rid of it.
 

Swag

Well-Known Member
Crap I broke a CFL in my hands on accident once... i'll get a job for the hills have eyes 3....
 

sgr42o

Well-Known Member
More info for those who care:

There has recently been some concern over the possibility that broken CFLs can be an important source of exposures to mercury, a toxic metal and a key component of compact fluorescent lightbulbs (CFLs). Although mercury is a toxic pollutant, mercury exposures from broken CFLs are not likely to harm you and your family. This is due to several factors, including the amount and duration of your exposures and the specific type of mercury that you are exposed to.

Mercury in CFLs are present as elemental (or metallic) mercury. Once spilled, you can be exposed to elemental mercury by touching it, after which it can be eaten and/or absorbed through your skin. More importantly for health, you can also be exposed to mercury through the air, as elemental mercury vaporizes readily (essentially becomes a gas) and can thus be inhaled into your lungs. Breathing elemental mercury into your lungs is generally more dangerous than if you ate the mercury or absorbed it through your skin. Once inhaled, the mercury vapor can damage the central nervous system, kidneys, and liver.

These toxic effects are why any mercury spill should be handled carefully, including one that results from a CFL breaking. Having said this, careful handling does not mean that expensive or complicated clean-up of the spill is needed or that you should be worried about you or your family's health, if a CFL were to break in your home.

This is because CFLs contain relatively small amounts of mercury -- EPA estimates this amount to be 4-5 milligrams (mg) in a typical CFL. A spill of this amount of mercury is not likely to present any excess risk to you or your family. A quick back-of-the-envelope calculation shows why. [Note: This example is meant only as a quick and dirty example. It is not intended to represent every case nor every situation.] For example, we could imagine the following scenario:

A CFL containing 5 mg of mercury breaks in your child’s bedroom that has a volume of about 25 m3 (which corresponds to a medium sized bedroom). The entire 5 mg of mercury vaporizes immediately (an unlikely occurrence), resulting in an airborne mercury concentration in this room of 0.2 mg/m3. This concentration will decrease with time, as air in the room leaves and is replaced by air from outside or from a different room. As a result, concentrations of mercury in the room will likely approach zero after about an hour or so.

Under these relatively conservative assumptions, this level and duration of mercury exposure is not likely to be dangerous, as it is lower than the US Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) standard of 0.05 mg/m3 of metallic mercury vapor averaged over eight hours. [To equate these values, we could estimate the average indoor airborne mercury concentration for 8 hours, beginning post-spill at an estimated starting value of 0.2 mg/m3 and decreasing from there. If one assumes the the air exchanges completely in one hour (a fairly standard assumption), then the 8-hour average concentration would be 0.025 mg/m3.]

Even though mercury from the broken CFL is not likely to be dangerous, it would be wise to take extra precautions to minimize mercury exposures. The US EPA publishes guidelines about the specific steps that you should take to clean up mercury in the event that a CFL breaks in your home. Briefly, EPA recommends that (1) you immediately open windows to reduce mercury concentrations inside your home; (2) you do not touch the spilled mercury; (3) you clean up the broken CFL glass carefully and immediately (but not with your hands or a vacuum cleaner), and (4) you wipe the affected area with a paper towel to remove all glass fragments and mercury. EPA further recommends that you place the paper towel and glass fragments in a sealed plastic bag and bring the sealed bag to your local Household Hazardous Waste (HHW)
Source: http://www.treehugger.com/files/2007/05/ask_treehugger_14.php

Just remember we add fans into the mix, we grow in small areas, and we're growing something we plan on consuming so it definitely increases the risks. It's probably still very small but it's worth taking the proper precautions.
 

unohu69

Well-Known Member
just smashed 2. there are dangerous things all around us. be aware, live. good luck, and duck when you have to....
 
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