Quote: Originally posted by Deathunter88 | Quote: Originally posted by Schmiddy |
where I live you need a company license to buy anything other than latex paint and deck stain(consumer grade stuff).
I'm not after pure n-hexane and am happy with the mix(for the time being)
I was after pet.ether and was gonna settle on ordering some n-hexane until I saw the price.
My basic goals are a solvent that boils above 40* below 70* and contains no benzene or unsaturated compounds and is immiscible with water.
although I will possibly be distilling starting fluid for ether in the next couple weeks,God willing,that's diethyl ether and not what I'm currently
after.
also the cost of it, a 300g can of starter fluid is over $10 while a liter of gas is less than a dollar and contains a good 25-40% of what I'm after.
of all my OTC sources for a pet. ether/hexane gasoline seemed the highest yielding, cheapest and is working out good so far.
Gasoline and oil in general, is a fascinating mix and although I live in major oil producing region I never really appreciated undecomposed wood
juice until now |
Unfortunately, gasoline contains a large percentage of unsaturated alkenes (maybe up to 40%) so loves to react with stuff. I found this out the hard
way, so maybe try searching a bit harder for other solvents. |
I was going by the wiki article and it says that 10% H2SO4 wash deals with that.
from wiki:
Most of the unsaturated hydrocarbons may be removed by shaking two or three times with 10% of the volume of concentrated sulfuric acid; vigorous
shaking is then continued with successive portions of a concentrated solution of potassium permanganate in 10% sulfuric acid until the color of the
permanganate remains unchanged. The solvent is then thoroughly washed with sodium carbonate solution and then with water, dried over anhydrous calcium
chloride, and distilled. If required perfectly dry, it can be allowed to stand over sodium wire, or calcium hydride.[6]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petroleum_ether
If I was in correct in this please advise. |