industrial paraffin oil liquid paraffin mineral oil industrial grade
is a clear liquid that are made up of saturated hydrocarbons with a straight-chain structure. They are either extracted from kerosene or through the
“Fischer-Tropsch process” at gas-to-liquid production sites. Paraffin (or called kerosene) is a mixture of hydrocarbons; it usually consists of about 10 different
hydrocarbons, each containing from 10 to 16 carbon atoms per molecule; the constituents include n-dodecane, alkyl benzene, and naphthalene and its derivatives. Kerosene
is obtained from crude oil by distillation and is used as a fuel for heating and aircraft. N-paraffin C10-C13 is a colorless liquid with a mild odor. It is insoluble in water
uniquely poor as motor fuels, while isoparaffins have good
engine-combustion characteristics. Longer-chain paraffin are major constituents of waxes. Normal paraffin are produced from select kerosene and/or gasoil, feedstocks using
molecular sieves extraction. After appropriate purification treatment of desulfurization, DE aromatization, the n-paraffin stream is passed into the fractionation unit, then the
desired carbon cuts are obtained. Normal paraffins are used as a solvent; a basic material in the manufacture of surfactants; in the manufacture of metalworking compounds,
lube oil components, plasticizers and chloroparaffins; production of oils for aluminum cold rolling; catalyst carrier for olefin polimerization; raw materials for a wide range of applications.
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