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Summary Of: Ethylene glycol

Ethylene glycol is produced from... to produce ethylene glycol according to the... The highest yields of ethylene glycol occur at acidic or neutral pH with a large excess of water... ethylene glycol yields of 90... The major use of ethylene glycol is as an antifreeze in... Ethylene glycol is also commonly used in chilled water... Ethylene glycol is being widely used to inhibit the formation of... Ethylene glycol can be recovered from the natural gas and reused as an inhibitor after a purification... Ethylene glycol has become increasingly important in the... capabilities of ethylene glycol have made it an important component of... Minor uses of ethylene glycol include the manufacture of... Ethylene glycol may also be used as a... Ethylene glycol is commonly used in laboratories to precipitate out proteins in solution... Ethylene glycol is commonly used as a preservative for specimens in schools... Ethylene glycol flows down from the top of a tower and meets a rising mixture of water... Instead of removing water ethylene glycol can also be used to depress the temperature at which... Ethylene glycol is also used in the manufacture of some... Ethylene glycol has seen some use as a rot and fungal treatment for wood... Ethylene glycol may also be one of the minor ingredients in screen cleaning solutions... Ethylene glycol can begin to breakdown at 230... of ethylene glycol solutions with a... fire catastrophe a coolant consisting of ethylene glycol and water was implicated as a possible cause via this reaction... Ethylene glycol was first prepared in... Ethylene Glycol and Propylene Glycol Toxicity...

Encyclodia Page On: Ethylene glycol

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| | | IUPAC name | CAS number | SMILES | Molecular formula | Molar mass | Density | Melting point | Boiling point | Solubility | water | Miscible | Viscosity | MSDS | External MSDS | MSDS | EU classification | NFPA 704 | | R-phrases | R22 | R36 | S-phrases | S26 | S36 | S37 | S39 | S45 | S53 | Flash point | Autoignition
temperature
| diols | Propylene glycol | diethylene glycol | triethylene glycol | Supplementary data page | Structure and
properties
| n | εr | Thermodynamic
data
| Spectral data | UV | IR | NMR | MS | standard state
(at 25 °C, 100 kPa)
| Infobox references | IUPAC name | alcohol | diol | chemical compound | automotive | antifreeze | toxic | ethylene | ethylene oxide | water | chemical equation | C2H4O | H2O | reaction | catalyzed | acids | bases | pH | oligomers | diethylene glycol | triethylene glycol | deicing | windshields | air conditioning | natural gas clathrates | plastics | polyester | resins | polyethylene terephthalate | soft drinks | antifreeze | vitrification | capacitors | 1,4-dioxane | corrosion | personal computers | protecting group | carbonyl groups | organic synthesis | p-toluenesulfonic acid | BF3·Et2O | acetal | hydrolysis | isophorone | azeotropic distillation | | formaldehyde | desiccant | natural gas | hydrocarbon | hydrates | vaccines | shoe polish | isopropyl alcohol | ethylene glycol poisoning | electrolysis | silver | anode | exothermic reaction | Apollo 1 | citation needed | 1859 | French | Charles-Adolphe Wurtz | World War I | explosives | 1937 | ethylene oxide | engine | boiling point | evaporative cooling | 2007 | 10-02 | doi | ISBN 0-471-16019-9 | J. Org. Chem. | doi | Department of Health and Human Services | Categories | Alcohols | Polyols | Hazardous air pollutants | Household chemicals | Alcohol solvents | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since August 2007 |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ethylene glycol".