Comparing E209 - Heptylparaben vs E905CI - Microcrystalline wax

Synonyms
E209
Heptylparaben
E905ci
Microcrystalline wax
Products

Found in 0 products

Found in 23 products

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Popular questions
  1. Comp where to plug e209 cable?

    E209 is the E-number for heptylparaben, a synthetic paraben preservative (not permitted in EU foods); it isn’t a cable or plug.

  2. Doctor who e209?

    In food labeling, E209 means heptylparaben, a preservative not permitted in EU foods; it doesn’t refer to Doctor Who.

  3. How to charge razor scooter e209?

    E209 is heptylparaben, a food preservative (not permitted in EU foods) and unrelated to charging a Razor scooter.

  4. What does e209 mean on ambulance report?

    On food labels, E209 denotes heptylparaben, a preservative (not permitted in EU foods); it’s not a standard ambulance/EMS code.

  5. What does e209 member mean on ambulance report?

    E209 refers to heptylparaben in food contexts (not permitted in EU foods); “E209 member” on an ambulance report would be an unrelated internal code, not the additive.

  1. What is microcrystalline wax made of?

    A mineral wax refined from petroleum residuals (de-oiled petrolatum), composed mainly of high–molecular-weight saturated hydrocarbons with branched and cyclic structures.

  2. 1 pound of microcrystalline wax weighs how much in everdur bronze?

    For the same volume, Everdur bronze (≈8.3–8.7 g/cm³) is about 9–10× denser than microcrystalline wax (≈0.90–0.95 g/cm³), so 1 lb of wax volume would weigh roughly 9–10 lb if cast in Everdur.

  3. At what temperature does microcrystalline wax melt?

    Typically about 60–90°C (140–194°F), depending on the grade; some hard grades approach ~95°C (203°F).

  4. How to determine the crystallinity of microcrystalline wax?

    Use differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) to estimate crystalline fraction from melting enthalpy and X‑ray diffraction (XRD/WAXS) to quantify crystalline versus amorphous phases; FTIR can provide supportive qualitative insight.

  5. How to make dark microcrystalline paste wax?

    Melt microcrystalline wax (optionally with 10–20% carnauba for hardness), then blend in odorless mineral spirits or turpentine to a paste consistency and disperse a small amount of carbon black or iron oxide pigment for color; mix thoroughly and cool, observing strict solvent fire-safety.