soma
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lanosterol boiling point
Is there a way to predict the boiling point of a substance? I'm wondering about lanosterol.
It has a melting point of 138-140C but no one lists a boiling point.
There is a paper that talks about concentrating lanosterol from lanolin using molecular distillation. They had temps around 183C with .1Pa
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unionised
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You have an indication of the boiling point.
183C at 0.1 Pa
At higher pressures the boiling point will be huger and at normal atmospheric pressure it may well decompose before it boils.
Cholesterol, a similar molecule, is said to boil- with decomposition- at 360C
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SWIM
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They have these things called nomographs, I think, which are for extrapolating boiling points at various pressures from one known boiling point.
They aren't tremendously accurate, but people use them when nothing better is available.
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UC235
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Quote: Originally posted by SWIM | They have these things called nomographs, I think, which are for extrapolating boiling points at various pressures from one known boiling point.
They aren't tremendously accurate, but people use them when nothing better is available. |
They are more accurate for nonpolar materials. They don't work as well for polar stuff, but at least can give you an idea where the boiling point
might be.
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