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Methyl alcohol synthetic

For methyl alcohol, two volumes of synthetic n-hexane, b.p. 68-6-69 0° (uncorr.), and one volume of the alcohol to be tested are mixed and the homogeneous mixture is cooled in ice until the appearance of a cloudiness. A thermometer is placed in the solution, which is allowed to warm gradually to the temperature at which the second phase disappears. The... [Pg.20]

Absolute methyl alcohol. The synthetic methanol now available is suitable for most purposes without purification indeed, some manufacturers claim a purity of 99 85 per cent, with not more than 0 1 per cent, by weight of water and not more than 0 02 per cent, by weight of acetone. Frequently, however, the acetone content may be as high as 0 1 per cent, and the water content 0-5-1 per cent. [Pg.169]

If the small proportion of acetone present in synthetic methyl alcohol is objectionable, it may be removed when present in quantities up to... [Pg.169]

Methanol [67-56-1] (methyl alcohol), CH OH, is a colorless Hquid at ambient temperatures with a mild, characteristic alcohol odor. Originally called wood alcohol siace it was obtained from the destmctive distillation of wood, today commercial methanol is sometimes referred to as synthetic methanol because it is produced from synthesis gas, a mixture of hydrogen and carbon oxides, generated by a variety of sources. [Pg.274]

Chemical Reactivity - Reactivity with Water Reacts slowly to form flammable hydrogen gas, which can accumulate in closed area Reactivity with Common Materials Corrosive to natural rubber, some synthetic rubbers, some greases and some lubricants Stability During Transport Stable Neutralizing Agents for Acids and Caustics Flush with 3% aqueous ammonia solution, then with water. Methyl alcohol may also be used Polymerization Not pertinent Inhibitor of Polymerization Not pertinent. [Pg.104]

Confirmation of this constitution was provided by Spath and Becke, > who identified 5-methoxy-3 4-methylenedioxy-o-phthalic acid as an oxidation product of anhalonine. The synthetic df-anhalonine was resolved by crystallisation of the f-tartrate from methyl alcohol, into f-anhalonine, m.p. 85-6°, — 56-3° (CHCI3) and its optical antipode,... [Pg.159]

Methyl alcohol, CH3OH, is the lowest member of the paraffin alcohols, and although it occurs to a small extent in the free state in a few essential oils it is not a perfume material at all, and, being very soluble in water, is entirely washed out of the oil by the distillation waters. There are, however, a number of highly odorous esters of methyl alcohol which are indispensable in synthetic perfumery. These are as follows —... [Pg.162]

Oxygen is used in making several important synthetic gases and in the production of ammonia, methyl alcohol, and so on. [Pg.227]

Methylamine occurs in herring brine 2 in crude methyl alcohol from wood distillation,3 and in the products obtained by the dry distillation of beet molasses residues.4 It has been prepared synthetically by the action of alkali on methyl cyanate or iso-cyanurate 5 by the action of ammonia on methyl iodide,6 methyl chloride,7 methyl nitrate,8 or dimethyl sulfate 9 by the action of methyl alcohol on ammonium chloride,10 on the addition compound between zinc chloride and ammonia,11 or on phos-pham 12 by the action of bromine and alkali on acetamide 13 by the action of sodamide on methyl iodide 14 by the reduction of chloropicrin,15 of hydrocyanic or of ferrocyanic acid,16 of hexamethylenetetramine,17 of nitromethane,18 or of methyl nitrite 19 by the action of formaldehyde on ammonium chloride.20... [Pg.70]

Methanol (methyl alcohol, wood alcohol) is widely used in the industrial production of synthetic organic compounds and as a constituent of many commercial solvents. In the home, methanol is most frequently found in the form of "canned heat" or in windshield-washing products. Poisonings occur from accidental ingestion of methanol-containing products or when it is misguidedly ingested as an ethanol substitute. [Pg.502]

It is reported that trimethylamine in combination occurs in large amounts in beet-root residues 2 and can be obtained from them by the action of caustic soda it occurs also in herring brine.3 From both of these sources, however, the substance is obtained in an impure state and can be purified only by rather tedious methods. This is indicated by the fact that trimethylamine has always been an expensive substance. Synthetic methods for its production are by the action of methyl iodide on ammonia 4 by the distillation of tetramethylammo-nium hydroxide 6 by the action of magnesium nitride upon methyl alcohol 6 by the action of zinc upon trimethyloxy-ammonium halides 7 by the action of formaldehyde upon ammonium chloride under pressure 8 by the action of ammonium chloride upon paraformaldehyde.9 Of these syn-... [Pg.81]

The most important synthetic processes are (1) the oxidation of acetaldehyde, and (2) the direct synthesis ftom methyl alcohol and carbon monoxide. The latter reaction must proceed under very high pressure (approximately 650 atmospheres) and at about 250 C. The reaction takes place 111 the liquid phase and dissolved cobaltous iodide... [Pg.6]

At the time of the first World War the methyl alcohol which was needed for the preparation of tetryl was procured from the distillation of wood. It was expensive and limited in amount. Formaldehyde was produced then, as it is now, by the oxidation of methyl alcohol, and a demand for it was a demand upon the wood-distillation industry. Formaldehyde was the raw material from which methylamine was produced commercially, and the resulting methylamine could be used for the preparation of tetryl by the alternative method from dinitrochlorobenzene. It was also the raw material from which certain useful explosives could be prepared, but its high price and its origin in the wood-distillation industry deprived the explosives in question of all but an academic interest. With the commercial production of synthetic methyl alcohol, the same explosives are now procurable from a raw material which is available in an amount limited only by the will of the manufacturers to produce it. [Pg.276]

The nitroamines are substituted ammonias, substances in which a nitro group is attached directly to a trivalent nitrogen atom. They are prepared in general either by the nitration of a nitrogen base or of one of its salts, or they are prepared by the splitting off of water from the nitrate of the base by the action of concentrated sulfuric acid upon it. At present two nitroamines are of particular interest to the explosives worker, namely, nitro-guanidine and cyclotrimethylenetrinitramine (cyclonite). Both are produced from synthetic materials which have become available in large commercial quantities only since the first World War, the first from cyanamide, the second from formaldehyde from the oxidation of synthetic methyl alcohol. [Pg.369]

Methyl alcohol (methanol wood alcohol) a colorless, volatile, inflammable, and poisonous alcohol (CH,OH) traditionally formed by destructive distillation (q.v.) of wood or, more recently, as a result of synthetic distillation in chemical plants. [Pg.443]

A product known as synthetic methyl acetone is prepared by mixing acetone (50%), methyl acetate (30%), and methyl alcohol (20%) and is used widely for coagulating latex and in paint removers and lacquers. [Pg.17]

Before 1926 all methyl alcohol was made by distillation of wood. Now methanol is produced by synthetic methods. [Pg.322]

Methyl alcohol. Redistil the purest commercial (synthetic) alcohol. B.p. 63°. [Pg.500]

In the early 1980s, the conversion of methyl alcohol (MeOH) to gasoline over synthetic zeolite catalysts was being studied. One set of experiments using MeOH H-ZSM-5 led to the hypothesis that carbenes, like CH2, were involved in this industrially important process.87 However, a more explanatory mechanism was proposed88 and, by decade s end, a rigorous study of this reaction using MAS 13C NMR showed CO to be the key intermediate.89 Recently, the precise role of H-ZSM-5 has even been questioned.90... [Pg.227]

Malanonitrile, technical grade Metallic salts of acyclic organic chemicals Metallic stearate Methanol, synthetic (methyl alcohol)... [Pg.471]


See other pages where Methyl alcohol synthetic is mentioned: [Pg.162]    [Pg.512]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.488]    [Pg.335]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.162]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.447]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.718]    [Pg.692]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.276 , Pg.277 , Pg.369 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.276 , Pg.277 , Pg.369 ]




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