Isopropyl Alcohol
Isopropyl alcohol, also known as isopropanol; is a clear, ethanol and acetone-like odor; flammable alcohol. It forms solutions with water, ethanol, acetone, chloroform and benzene in all proportions, can undergo all typical reactions of secondary alcohols, and reacts strongly with strong oxidizing agents. Isopropyl alcohol, used as a low-cost solvent in many applications, is similar to ethyl alcohol in terms of solvent properties and evaporation rate. In the event of combustion, it decomposes and forms carbon monoxide, which is toxic.
Isopropyl alcohol (IPA) is also used in the production of acetone and its derivatives, as well as other chemicals such as isopropyl acetate, isopropylamine, diisopropyl ether, isopropyl xanthate, fatty acid esters, herbicidal esters, and aluminum isopropoxide.
Other areas of use include: as a cooling agent in beer production, as a dehydrating agent in polyvinyl fluoride production, as a polymerization modifier, and as a flavoring agent in home tobacco and personal care products.
Iso Butanol
It is an alcohol type auxiliary organic solvent. It is used as an auxiliary solvent in alkyd-amino, acrylic amino systems and nitrocellulose systems by combining with aromatic hydrocarbon solvents.
N-Butanol
Butanol. CH3CH2CH2CH2OH. n-butyl alcohol; butyl alcohol; propyl carbinol. It is a liquid that burns with a bright flame. It shows all the properties of primary alcohols. It is soluble in water and mixes with alcohol and ether in all proportions. Its vapors cause coughing. Oils, waxes, resins and
Ethyl Alcohol
The most important member of the class of organic compounds called alcohols. Also called ethanol. Considering its molecular formula (C2H5OH), it is defined as the form of ethane (C2H6), a saturated hydrocarbon, in which one of the six hydrogens is replaced by a hydroxyl group (OH).
Pure ethyl alcohol is a clear, colorless, characteristic odorous liquid.
Methyl Alcohol
Bacteria, which are also living things, cannot produce methyl alcohol. Producing methyl alcohol would mean suicide. It is not possible for bacteria to produce any other type of alcohol than ethyl alcohol.
Methyl alcohol (Turkish name for wood spirit) is produced during the kiln-drying of tree logs for use in the industry, furniture and construction sector. Timber and logs are kiln-dryed in factories to extend their life and increase their durability. While the maggots that nest in the heated wood die during kiln-drying, the spirit of the wood (methyl alcohol) is also released. When timber processing plants perform this process, the living cells of the timber are killed and prevented from re-emerging, and it is cleaned of maggots and worm eggs. Dry timber that machines can process without being damaged is obtained, and the economically valuable heat, methyl alcohol used in the perfume and cologne industry.
2 Ethyl Hexanol
Solvent used in organic coating compositions, usually in amounts below 10%, when a late-evaporating polar tail solvent is required. Also called isooctanol and isooctyl alcohol.
Boiling point: 184