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Paints catalytically active additives

Acetaldehyde is the product of the Wacker process. At the end of the fifties oxidation of ethene to ethanal replaced the addition of water to acetylene, because the acetylene/coal-based chemistry became obsolete, and the ethene/petrochemistry entered the commercial organic chemicals scene. The acetylene route involved one of the oldest organometallics-mediated catalytic routes started up in the 1920s the catalyst system comprised mercury in sulfuric acid. Coordination of acetylene to mercury(II) activates it toward nucleophilic attack of water, but the reaction is slow and large reactor volumes of this toxic catalyst were needed. An equally slow related catalytic process, the zinc catalysed addition of carboxylic acids to acetylene, is still in use in paint manufacture. [Pg.320]


See other pages where Paints catalytically active additives is mentioned: [Pg.99]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.84]    [Pg.51]    [Pg.412]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.1112]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.229 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.229 ]




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