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Keywords:
Naphtha,
Gasoline,
Propane,
Hydrocarbons,
Solvent
Saturated hydrocarbons, such as gasoline and propane, whose molecules do not have carbon atoms in a ring structure.
Solvents obtained by fractionation of crude petroleum oil. Examples are textile spirits, VMP Naphtha, gasoline and kerosene. Frequently used as part of the solvent mixture in "co-solvent" and "polyamide" type flexo inks, in conjunction with Buna-N type plates and rollers; tend to swell natural and butyl rubber.
'aliphatics' means organic compounds that are characterized by a straight, branched, or cyclic (non-benzene ring) arrangement of carbon atoms that do not contain halogens
Saturated, hydrocarbons having an open chain structure. Familiar examples: gasoline and propane.
A class of organic solvents which are composed of open chains of carbon atoms. Aliphatics are relatively weak solvents. Mineral spirits and VM & P Naphtha are aliphatic solvents.
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