Tabun, GA GA, or tabun, was the first of the G series nerve agents discovered by a German chemist Dr. Gerhard Schrader, in the mid 1930's while experimenting with new types of pesticides. Germany soon realized that tabun had military implications and that it could be used as a chemical weapon. GA was the only chemical nerve agent produced in mass quantities and from by the end of WWII Germany had produced 12,000 tonnes of tabun. Nerve agents, as they were called, had the effect of hindering the nerve impulses making the victim between mus Soon after the discovery of GA other more potent nerve agents were discovered, like sarin and soman. |
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Sarin, GB GB, sarin, is the second is a series of nerve agents discovered by Dr. Schrader. The name sarin came from the the researchers involved in the project, Schrader, Ambros, Ritter, and Linde. GB is slightly more toxic than GA and has a much higher vapor pressure then any other nerve agent. The higher vapor pressure means that it is is lethal by inhalation, as well as absorption through the skin. All the other nerve agents, by comparison, have a much smaller vapor pressure and are lethal by skin contact. |
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Soman, GD GD was the third of the nerve agents, first produced in 1944. In the coding of the nerve agents by the allies the symbol "GC" was not used since "GC" was the symbol used for gonorrhea in the medical references. Both sarin and soman were never produced in large quantities during WWII due to the large quantities of feedstock material required in the production of these agents. |
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Cyclohexyl sarin, GF |
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VX |
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