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Paints surface active agents

Suspensions of oil in water (32), such as lanolin in wool (qv) scouring effluents, are stabilized with emulsifiers to prevent the oil phase from adsorbing onto the membrane. Polymer latices and electrophoretic paint dispersions are stabilized using surface-active agents to reduce particle agglomeration in the gel-polarization layer. [Pg.298]

Di- and Triisobutylcncs. Diisobutylene [18923-87-0] and tnisobutylenes are prepared by heating the sulfuric acid extract of isobutylene from a separation process to about 90°C. A 90% yield containing 80% dimers and 20% trimers results. Use centers on the dimer, CgH, a mixture of 2,4,4-trimethylpentene-1 and -2. Most of the dimer-trimer mixture is added to the gasoline pool as an octane improver. The balance is used for alkylation of phenols to yield octylphenol, which in turn is ethoxylated or condensed with formaldehyde. The water-soluble ethoxylated phenols are used as surface-active agents in textiles, paints, caulks, and sealants (see Alkylphenols). [Pg.372]

The octylphenol condensate is used as an additive to lubricating oils and surface-active agents. Other uses of dimer are amination to octylamine and octyldiphenylamine, used in mbber processing hydroformylation to nonyl alcohol for phthalate production and carboxylation via Koch synthesis to yield acids in formulating paint driers (see Drying). [Pg.372]

The stabilizing of aqueous latexes succeeded by using emulsifiers (anionic, nonionic) and/or their mixture, steric stabilizators (polyvinyl alcohol (PVOH), hydroxyethyl cellulose, polyethylene glycol, new protective colloids etc.), and polymerizable surfaces active agents, in general. Vinyl acetate (VAc) emulsion homopolymers and copolymers (latexes) are widely used as binders in water-based interior and exterior architectural paints, coatings, and adhesives, since they have higher mechanical and water resistance properties than the homopolymers of both monomers [2, 4, 7]. [Pg.406]

Other paint stripper ingredients include surface-active agents (surfactants), emulsifiers, thickeners, sealants, and corrosion inhibitors. Thickeners such as methyl cellulose derivatives are used to thicken the stripper so that it can be brushed onto vertical surfaces. Sealants snch as crude or refined paraffin act to retard evaporation of the CH2CI2 so that the stripper remains effective over a long period of time. [Pg.227]

Diethanolamine is a viscous liquid widely used as a chemical intermediate and as a corrosion inhibitor and surface-active agent in various products including metalworking fluids, oils, fuels, paints, inks, cosmetic formulations and agricultural products. Occupational exposure may occur by inhalation and dermal contact, particularly in metal-machining occupations. No data were available on environmental exposure to... [Pg.372]

Use Paints, flotation, lubricants surface-active agents, resins, synthetic fibers. [Pg.759]

Use Intermediate for accelerators, dyes, pharmaceuticals, insecticides, fungicides, surface active agents, tanning, dyeing of acetate textiles, fuel additive, polymerization inhibitor, component of paint removers, solvent, photographic developer, rocket propellent. [Pg.816]

Use Lubricants, plasticizers, paint and varnish vehicles, gelling agents, urethane intermediates, adhesives, cross-linking agents, humectants, textile fiber finishes, functional fluids, surface-active agents, dispersants and emulsifiers in foods, pharmaceuticals, cosmetic preparations. [Pg.1012]

Surfactants find apphcation in almost all disperse systems that are utilised in areas such as paints, dyestulfs, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals, fibres, and plastics. Therefore, a fundamental understanding of the physical chemistry of surface-active agents, their unusual properties, and their phase behaviour is essential for most formulation chemists. In addition, an understanding of the basic phenomena involved in the application of surfactants, such as in the preparation of emulsions and suspensions and their subsequent stabilisation, in microemulsions, in wetting, spreading and adhesion, is vitally important to arrive at the correct composition and control of the system involved [1, 2]. This is particularly the case with many formulations in the chemical industry mentioned above. [Pg.12]

Emulsification—the formation of emulsions from two immiscible liquid phases—is probably the most versatile property of surface-active agents for practical applications and, as a result, has been extensively studied. Paints, polishes, pesticides, metal cutting oils, margarine, ice cream, cosmetics, metal cleaners, and textile processing oils are all emulsions or are used in emulsified form. Since there are a number of books and chapters of books devoted to emulsions and emulsification (Sjoblom, 1996 Solans and Kunieda, 1996 Becher, 2001), the discussion here covers only those aspects of emulsification that bear on the role of surfactants in this phenomenon. [Pg.303]

Diethanolamine is used in the production of surface-active agents and lubricants for the textile industry as an intermediate for rubber chemicals as an emulsifier as a humectant and softening agent as a detergent in paints, shampoos, and other cleaners and as an intermediate in resins and plasticizers. [Pg.246]

To prevent cissing, an additive that reduces interfacial tension is required in the paint. When interfacial tension falls, the particle is wetted by the finish and absorbed into the film. Surface-active agents Surfactants, see below) reduce interfacial tension. Alternatively, an agent can be added that will reduce the liquid surface tension so much, that the interfacial tension also becomes low. Silicone oils do this effectively. Very little silicone oil is required, because it finds its way almost entirely to the surface. Silicones are semi-organic compounds... [Pg.131]

Hazardous Decomp. Prods. Heated to decomp, emits CO, CO2, NOx, ammonia, traces of organic compds. inc. hydrogen cyanide, nitriles, isocyanates, nitrosamines, amines NFPA Health 3, Flammability 4, Reactivity 0 Uses Intermediate in organic synthesis intermediate for water-gel explosives, accelerators, pharmaceuticals, insecticides, N-methylpyrrolidine, methylalkanolamines, surface active agents, fungicides in tanning component of photographic developers and paint removers fuel additive prod, of dyes polymerization inhibitor rocket propellant See also Methylamine... [Pg.2580]


See other pages where Paints surface active agents is mentioned: [Pg.541]    [Pg.587]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.545]    [Pg.724]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.372]    [Pg.541]    [Pg.219]    [Pg.505]    [Pg.1671]    [Pg.437]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.690]    [Pg.165]    [Pg.1090]    [Pg.1482]    [Pg.2580]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.402]    [Pg.616]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.308]    [Pg.439]    [Pg.200]    [Pg.477]    [Pg.668]    [Pg.1201]    [Pg.173]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.228 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.228 ]




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Activating agents

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