Detecting chemical agents in outdoor environments such as a battlefield is made challenging by not only the spurious signatures from background chemicals and surfaces (e.g. asphalt, dirt, concrete), but also by the chemical transformation of the actual agents. The change of CW agents to other species can be catalyzed by other chemicals present in the scene, by different substrates, as well as by local weather conditions. Some of the final environmental transformation products are known (e.g. for the G agents methylphosphonic acid), but many of the intermediate chemical states are not, nor are the rates of transformation to the other intermediates or the end products. In this study we have made preliminary optical investigations into the degradation products of a G-agent intermediate, namely methylphosphonic anhydride and its rate of conversion to the more stable methylphosphonic acid. Using infrared and Raman spectroscopies, we have found that the relative humidity greatly affects the rate of change and we report first results from these studies.
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