I'd check the melting point.
Put some in a test tube and surround it with ice and water.
Anything that doesn't freeze isn't benzene.
If essentially all of it freezes that would suggest it's fairly clean- "commercially pure" benzene.
Also, this is a simple way of purification.
Cool the stuff until 90% or so has frozen, then pour of the liquid.
Almost all the impurities will be in the liquid so, when the frozen stuff melts, it will be of very high purity.
(You can repeat this with the 10% that you poured off and that way you should recover nearly 99% of the original material in a pretty pure form.
assuming it wasn't too heavily contaminated in the first place.)
The big advantage of freezing as a method of purification is that it avoids having lots of boiling flammable liquid.
According to this
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18960430
the solubility of water in benzene is only 0.0363M: about 0.07%
That won't matter for most purposes and it's easy to remove by distillation.
(unexpectedly, perhaps, the water distills off first as an azeotrope).
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