Nitrogen Leak At Arizona Intel Plant Sends Employees To Hospital

Nitrogen Leak At Intel Plant Sends Employees To Hospital
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A nitrogen gas leak at an Intel plant in Chandler, Arizona, sent 11 employees to the hospital on Saturday.

Chandler fire department spokesman Tom Dwiggins told The Huffington Post they received a call around 5:50 a.m. Saturday morning for a patient with difficulty breathing. When the fire department arrived on the scene, they found additional patients experiencing nausea, difficulty breathing, and skin and eye irritations.

"We determined that there was some type of hazardous leak which turned out to be nitrogen triflouride," he said. The leak was secured by Intel staff, according to Dwiggins.

In total, 43 patients were treated after experiencing symptoms. Eleven were transported to local hospitals.

More from Reuters:

(Reuters) - A gas leak at Intel Corp's second-biggest manufacturing plant, located in Chandler, Arizona, sickened up to 43 people, including 11 who were taken to a local hospital, company and local fire officials said on Saturday.

One of the buildings at the sprawling processing plant was evacuated after the leak of gas, which was identified as nitrogen triflouride, said Battalion Chief Tom Dwiggins, a fire department spokesman.

A spokesman for Intel, the world's biggest chipmaker, said the source of the leak was a single manufacturing tool in one of the company's silicon wafer fabrication facilities.

Intel spokesman Chuck Mulloy said the tool that caused the leak has been taken offline and operations at the plant have resumed as the company tries to determine the cause of the malfunction.

"There is no ongoing danger," Mulloy said.

Dwiggins said there was no threat to nearby neighborhoods.

"They monitored the air inside and outside the structure and in all cases the air was clean," he said.

The plant manufactures silicon wafers used to make semiconductors for computers. The components are made on 12 inch silicon wafers that are later sliced into individual components, according to the spokesman. Each component can contain more than a billion transistors.

Mulloy and Dwiggins said 43 people were treated at the scene, and as many as 11 individuals were taken to a hospital for further evaluation.

Those transported to hospitals were suffering from conditions including difficulty breathing, nausea and skin and eye irritation, said Dwiggins.

About 75 firefighters were called to the campus early on Saturday after a worker complained of difficulty breathing and then others began experiencing symptoms, Dwiggins said.

The plant in Chandler employs about 11,000 people. Intel operates two high-volume semiconductor manufacturing facilities at the site and is building a third facility, which is scheduled to open this year, according to the company website.

(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen in Chicago and David Schwartz in Phoenix; Editing by Greg McCune and Vicki Allen)

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Before You Go

13 Deadly Workplace Disasters
Rana Plaza Collapse -- Bangladesh -- 2013(01 of13)
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At least 1,000 workers died after a factory building near Dhaka, Bangladesh, collapsed in April, 2013. The building's owner was subsequently accused of ignoring signs the building was unsafe as well as illegally adding extra floors to the structure. (credit:AP)
West Fertilizer Co. Explosion -- West, Texas -- 2013(02 of13)
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After failing to disclose unsafe stores of ammonium nitrate, among other safety violations, a plant owned by West Fertilizer Co. exploded, killing 14 people and injuring 160. (credit:AP)
Triangle Shirtwaist Fire -- New York City -- 1911(03 of13)
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A national debate on workers' rights began after a fire spread though a Greenwich Village garment factory, called the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory, in 1911. The cause of the fire, which claimed the lives of 145 workers, is still unknown.(AP Photo/File) (credit:AP)
Texas City Disaster -- Port of Texas City -- 1947(04 of13)
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Shortly after a fire broke out on board, the SS Grandcamp's cargo of 2,300 tons of ammonium nitrate -- used for fertilizer -- exploded. The blast killed more than 400 people and is counted among one of the largest non-nuclear explosions in history. (credit:WikiMedia:)
Halifax Explosion -- Halifax, Nova Scotia -- 1917(05 of13)
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The Halifax explosion became known as the largest man-made pre-atomic explosion in history when the French ship Mont-Blanc, carrying almost 3,000 tons of explosives, collided with Norweigan ship Imo on December 6, 1917. About 1,800 people died and more than 9,000 were injured in the explosion, which reportedly even caused a small tsunami. (credit:WikiMedia:)
Union Carbide Gas Leak -- Bhopal, India -- 1984(06 of13)
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On December 3, 1984, a plant owned by U.S. chemical manufacturer Union Carbide leaked about 45 tons of gas in Bhopal, India. The gas spread to communities surrounding the plant, killing more than 2,000 people. It's estimated today that the spill may be responsible for more than 15,000 deaths. (credit:AP)
Courrières Mine Disaster -- Courrières, France -- 1906(07 of13)
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In one of the largest mine disasters in history, 1,060 miners died in northern France on March 10, 1906, after an explosion at Courrieres Colliery mines. (credit:WikiMedia:)
Hawks Nest Tunnel Disaster -- Gauley Bridge, West Virginia -- 1927(08 of13)
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Officially, 476 mostly migrant and African-American workers died as a direct result of exposure to the mineral silica while working on the Hawk's Nest Tunnel in West Virginia. However, it's estimated that the actual number may be closer to 1,000, when also considering those who indirectly died as a result. (credit:WikiMedia:)
Honkeiko Colliery Mining Disaster -- Benxi, China -- 1942(09 of13)
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More than 1,500 workers were killed at the Honkeiko mine in northern China after a dust and gas explosion. The tragedy is regarded as the worst mining disaster of all time. (credit:AP)
PEMEX San Juanico Explosion -- San Juanico, Mexico -- 1984(10 of13)
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Almost one-third of Mexico City's entire gas supply exploded in 1984, killing 500 to 600 people and injuring thousands more when a gas leak at Petroleos Mexicanos plant in San Juanico spread to the complex's flare pit. (credit:WikiMedia:)
Monongah Mining Disaster -- West Virginia - -1907(11 of13)
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The worst mining disaster in U.S. history happened on December 6, 1907, when an underground explosion killed 362 workers. (credit:WikiMedia:)
Pemberton Mill Collapse -- Lawrence, Massachusetts -- 1860(12 of13)
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Faulty construction, as well as poor management decisions, have largely been blamed for the collapse of the five-story Pemberton Mill in 1860. The tragedy killed 145 workers. (credit:WikiMedia:)
Tazreen Fashions Factory Fire -- Bangladesh -- 2012(13 of13)
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More than 100 workers were killed in a blaze at the Tazreen Fashions Factory in December 2012. The factory had received multiple warnings and was denied a safety license before the deadly fire took place. (credit:AP)