Wholesale O/p-toluene Sulfonic Acid Methyl Ester (optsm) Manufacturer, Cas No. 28804-47-9 Product Name: Methyl o/p-toluenesulfonate; Methyl O/P-Toluene Sulfonate; O/P-Toluene Sulfonic Acid Methyl Ester; Methyl O/P-Tosylate; OPTSME; OPTSM; MOPTS CAS No. 28804-47-9 Molecular Formula: C8H10O3S Molecular Weight: 186.23 EINECS No.: 249-237-3 Technical Specification: Appearance: Colorless or light yellow clear liquid Purity: ¥99% O-TSM: 40-70% P-TSM: 30-60% M-TSM: ¤5% Moisture: ¤0.5% Free acid: ¤0.2% OPTSC: ¤0.3% Ash: ¤0.1% Usage: Used as a methylation agent of organic synthesis, synthetic dyes, etc. Packing: 200kg plastic drum or 200kg plastic lined iron drum.
CAS No. : 5026-62-0 Chemical Formula : C8H7O3 H.S.code : 291619 E No. : E218 Weâ??re Methyl p-hydroxybenzoate Manufacturers, Suppliers and Wholesalers in China.Based on our 15 years in food additives & ingredients market, we have a knowledge of China market and manufacturers. We can help our abroad customers save time selecting good manufacturers and update the current market in China. Methyl p-hydroxybenzoate, E218, CAS No.5026-62-0, also called methyl paraben, is an organic compound manufactured through chemical synthesis, available as White crystalline powder used as antioxidants. Methyl P-Hydroxybenzoate is often used as an anti-fungal food preservative in chewing gum, dairy products, fat spreads, fruit products, etc. It can inhibit drosophilia growth in the larvae and pupae stages. As Methyl p-hydroxybenzoate Manufacturers, Suppliers and Wholesalers in China, we supply Methyl p-hydroxybenzoate food grade FCC,USP,EP. Methyl p-hydroxybenzoate powder Specification ITEM STANDARD Appearance White crystalline powder Purity (on dry base)% 99 Melting point 125-128 Sulphated ash %
Fuel LPG. Fuel Tank Capacity 2.0 L Fuel Consumption : App. 225 g P/H Length : 350 mm Height : 330 mm Width : 150 mm Weight(kg) Empty : 1.5 Kg (Empty)
4-Hydroxybenzoic acid Chemical Name:4-Hydroxybenzoic acid Trade Name:p-oxybenzoic acid Molecular Formula:C7H6O3 Molecular Weight:138.12 CAS No.:99-96-7 Properties:white odorless crystalline powder, easily soluble in hot water and alcohols, aethers and acetone, slightly soluble in cold water and benzene, insoluble in carbon bisulfide; relative density is 1.46 Use: Can be used as antiseptic, intermediate of dyes, pharmaceuticals; as main material of liquid crystal polymers; as material of pesticide intermediate Specification Item Specification Polymer Grade Technical Grade Appearance white crystal powder white crystal powder Purity(on dry base) % 99.6 99.0 Melting Point 214-217 212-216 Odor odorless odorless Solubility Clear and transparent clear and transparent Loss on Drying % 0.20 0.50 Color(Pt-Co) 10 40 Ash % 0.02 0.15 Sulfate(SO42-) 0.01 0.05 Chloride(Cl-) % 0.005 0.02 Phe% 0.01 0.10 Salicylic Acid % 0.02 0.10 4-Hydroxyisophthalic Acid(HIPA) ppm 500 / Insolubles in Metha ppm 50 / Potassium(K+) ppm 5 / Sodium (Na+) ppm 5 / Iron (Fe) ppm 5 / Ca2++Mg2+ppm 5 /
Plate Iron Scrap is a material that a visual inspection appears of regular shape. This by-product is formed after slag processing in electrometallurgical furnaces. Its chemical composition is homogeneous and stable with about Fe 90% and P around 1.4%, S 0.8% and C 1.4%. The max weight of each pieces is up to 1 ton. The material can be loaded loose in 20 heavy duty container. For further details feel free to contact us.
This Cast Iron slag is a by-product derived from the production of thermal insulating products. The byproduct is a ferrous slag which can be utilised in an electric arc furnace to produce crude steel. Physical Description On visual inspection, it appears to be made up of irregular shapes. Dimension: 500mm -800mm Chemical Composition Its chemical composition is homogeneous and stable with Fe contents in the range of 90 +/- 5% and P contents < 0.6% S around 0.15% and C% around 3.5%. Packing: Loose in container Loading: in 20 Container For further information, please feel free to contact us.
Frozen vannamei and monodon shrimps, all types, conventionnal, asc and organic, fresh and frozen salmon and rainbow trout: wr, fillets and all by products (heads, frames, bellies, b&p), frozen sushi, ready to eat, frozen raw and cooked spider crab claws.
Juniper oil is used in aromatherapy to help stimulate and strengthen the nerves and bolster the spirits in challenging situations, while helping to relieve urine retention. It is used for treating rheumatism, arthritis and gout, as well as cellulite, acne, dermatitis, blocked pores, psoriasis and weeping eczemas. The main chemical components of juniper oil are a-pinene, camphene, b-pinene, sabinene, myrcene, a-phellandrene, a-terpinene, y-terpinene, 1,4-cineole, b-phellandrene, p-cymene, terpinen-4-ol, bornyl acetate, cayophyllene and trace amounts of limonene, camphor, linalool, linalyl acetate, borneol and nerol.
Product of Procter & Gamble Indonesia Head & Shoulder available in Shampoo & Conditioner (sachet & bottle packaging). 1. Shampoo: Anti Hair Fall, Clean & Balance, Smooth & Silky, Cool Menthol, Cool Blast, Lemon Fresh, Retain, Supreme Moisture, Supreme Smooth, Supreme Anti Hair Fall. 2. Conditioner: Supreme Moisture, Supreme Anti Hair Fall.
Manufacturers of dyes and pigments like ultramarine blue, malachite green, methylene blue, methyl violet, Red iron oxide , yellow iron oxides.
Oregano - scientifically named Origanum vulgare by Carolus Linnaeus – is a common species of Origanum, a genus of the mint family (Lamiaceae). It is native to warm-temperate western and south western Eurasia and the Mediterranean region. Oregano is a perennial herb, growing from 20–80 cm tall, with opposite leaves 1- 4 cm long. The flowers are purple, 3–4 mm long, produced in erect spikes. It is sometimes called Wild Marjoram, and its close relative O. majoramum is then known as "Sweet Marjoram". Uses Culinary Dried oregano for culinary use. Oregano growing in a field. Oregano is an important culinary herb. It is particularly widely used in Turkish, Greek, Portuguese, Spanish, Latin American, and Italian cuisine. It is the leaves that are used in cooking, and the dried herb is often more flavourful than the fresh. [2] Oregano [3] is often used in tomato sauces, fried vegetables, and grilled meat. Together with basil, it contributes much to the distinctive character of many Italian dishes. It is commonly used by local chefs in southern Philippines when boiling carabao or cow meat to eliminate the odor of the meat, and to add a nice, spicy flavor. Oregano combines nicely with pickled olives, capers, and lovage leaves. Unlike most Italian herbs, [citation needed] oregano works with hot and spicy food, which is popular in southern Italy. Oregano is an indispensable ingredient in Greek cuisine. Oregano adds flavor to Greek salad and is usually added to the lemon-olive oil sauce that accompanies many fish or meat barbecues and some casseroles. In Turkish Cuisine, oregano is mostly used for flavoring meat, especially for mutton and lamb. In barbecue and kebab restaurants, it can be usually found on table, together with paprika, salt and pepper. Oregano growing in a pot. It has an aromatic, warm and slightly bitter taste. It varies in intensity; good quality oregano is so strong that it almost numbs the tongue, but the cultivars adapted to colder climates have often unsatisfactory flavor. The influence of climate, season and soil on the composition of the essential oil is greater than the difference between the various species. The related species Origanum onites (Greece, Turkey) and O. heracleoticum (Italy, Balkan Peninsula, West Asia) have similar flavors. A closely related plant is marjoram from Turkey, which, however, differs significantly in taste, because phenolic compounds are missing in its essential oil. Some breeds show a flavor intermediate between oregano and marjoram.
Sweet marjoram: Origanum (O) hortensis (orMajoranahortensis). Potmarjoram: O.onites Wildmajoram: O.vulgare. Syrian majoram is called zatar Family: Labiatae or Lamiaceae (mint family). In Europe, marjoram was a traditional symbol of youth and romantic love. Used by Romans as an aphrodisiac, it was used to cast love spells and was worn at weddings as a sign of happiness during the middle Ages. Greeks who wore marjoram wreaths at weddings called it “joy of the mountains.” It was used to brew beer before hops was discovered, and flavored a wine called hippocras. A cousin of the oregano family, marjoram originated in Mediterranean regions and is now a commonly used spice in many parts of Europe. Called zatar in the Middle east and often mistaken for oregano, it is also a popular spicing in Eastern Europe. Origin and Varieties Marjoram is indigenous to northern Africa and southwest Asia. It is cultivated around the Mediterranean, in England, Central and Eastern Europe, South America, the United States, and India. Description Marjoram leaf is used fresh, as whole or chopped, and dried whole or broken, and ground. The flowering tops and seeds, which are not as strong as the leaves, are also used as flavorings. Sweet marjoram is a small and oval-shaped leaf. It is light green with a greyish tint. Marjoram is fresh, spicy, bitter, and slightly pungent with camphor like notes. It has the fragrant herbaceous and delicate, sweet aroma of thyme and sweet basil. Pot marjoram is bitter and less sweet. Chemical Components Sweet marjoram has 0.3% to 1% essential oil, mostly monoterpenes. It is yellowish to dark greenish brown in color. It mainly consists of cis-sabinene hydrate (8% to 40%), -terpinene (10%), a-terpinene (7.6%), linalyl acetate (2.2%), terpinen 4-ol (18% to 48%), myrcene (1.0%), linalool (9% to 39%), -cymene (3.2%), caryophyllene (2.6%), and a-terpineol (7.6%). Its flavor varies widely depending on its origins. The Indian and Turkish sweet marjorams have more d-linalool, caryophyllene, carvacrol, and eugenol. Its oleoresin is dark green, and 2.5 lb. are equivalent to 100 lb. of freshly ground marjoram. Marjoram contains calcium, iron, magnesium, phosphorus, potassium, sodium, vitamin A, vitamin C, and niacin. Culinary uses of Marjoram Marjoram is typically used in European cooking and is added to fish sauces, clam chowder, butter-based sauces, salads, tomato-based sauces, vinegar, mushroom sauces, and eggplant. In Germany, marjoram is called the “sausage herb” and is used with thyme and other spices in different types of sausages. It is usually added at the end of cooking to retain its delicate flavor or as a garnish. It goes well with vegetables including cabbages, potatoes, and beans. The seeds are used to flavor confectionary and meat products.
PARSLEY (Petroselinum sativum/crispum - Umbelliferae) Parsley is a hardy biennial herb which is native to the eastern Mediterranean. It is thought to have originated in Sardinia, but records show that seeds were imported to Britain from Sardinia in 1548; the plant had already been introduced to northern Europe by the Romans. There are several varieties of the herb. The curly leaved or moss-curled is the one most familiar in Britain as a garnish. The plain- or flat-leaved, continental parsley has heavily divided leaves, but they are not so curly; this is the plant which can be confused with another, Aethusa cynapium or fool's parsley, which is poisonous. Less familiar is the Neapolitan parsley from southern Italy which has thick stalks, eaten in Italy like celery (and, in fact, its French name is 'persil aux jeuilles de cileri'). All parsleys have carrot-shaped roots which can be eaten, but the Hamburg parsley (P. fusiformis) has been developed for its roots rather than its leaves. The common parsleys have dark green leaves, pale yellow-green flowers in umbels, followed by fruit seeds. The name petroselinum comes from the Greek for rock celery, referring to the natural habitat of the plant. Interestingly, selinum is thought to be the same as selinon, the Greek name for celery; the Romans called parsley 'apium', also the botanical name for celery; and French fool's parsley is called ache des chiens, ache also once a name for wild celery. Celery also belongs to the Umbelliferae family, and possibly there have been confusions over the years. The Ancient Egyptians used parsley, as did the Greeks, who crowned victorious soldiers with wreaths of it. Hercules did this after killing the Nemean lion, and thereafter victors in the Nemean and Isthmian games would do the same. They believed that parsley had grown from the blood of a hero, Archemorus, and Homer tells of a victory won by charioteers whose horses had renewed vigour after eating parsley. Parsley grew on Circe's lawn in the Odyssey. Pliny said that no sauce or salad should be without parsley, as did Galen, and both Pliny and Dioscorides thought of it as a diuretic and emmenagogue. Apicius sang its praises too. The Byzantines used it as a diuretic and made a strong infusion to help kidney stones. Charlemagne ordered that it be cultivated in the imperial gardens as a vegetable, and it was eaten at every meal. It also found a place in monastic gardens at this time. More recently, in the nineteenth century research was done on the emmenagogic properties of a constituent of the oil, apiol, by Professor Galligo, and doctors de Poggeschi and Marrotte. These were later confirmed by Dr Leclerc, proving to be truly efficaceous in treating cases of menstrual problems, particularly pain.
Patchouli oil, eugenol usp, citronella oil, clove bud oil, nutmeg oil, isoeugenol, beta caryophyllene, cananga oil, vetiver oil rectified, vetiver oil md, methyl isoeugenol, cajeput oil, clove terpenes, fresh ginger oil, methyl eugenol, isoeugenyl acetate, eugenyl acetate, propenyl guaethol (vanitrope), patchouli terpenes, gurjun balsam (copaene), gurjun balsam (gurjunene), palmarosa oil, kaffir lime leaf oil, massoia bark oil, massoia lactone, dihydroeugenol, vetiveryl acetate, cocoa extract, coffee extract, natural caffeine anhydrous, caryophyllene acetate, caryophyllene formate, benzyl isoeugenol, geraniol natural, nutmeg oil safrole free, natural vanillin ex clove oil, patchoulol natural, lemongrass oil, natural methyl cinnamate.
1 141-78-6 Ethyl acetate 2 79-20-9 Methyl Acetate 3 123-86-4 Butyl acetate 4 108-32-7 Propylene carbonate 5 75-12-7 Formamide 6 127-19-5 N,N-dimethylacetamide 7 872-50-4 N-methylpyrrolidin-2-one 8 26171-83-5 1,2-butanediol 9 504-63-2 1,3-Propanediol 10 26761-45-5 2,3-Epoxypropyl neodecanoate 11 57-55-6 Propylene Glycol 12 108-94-1 Cyclohexanone 13 95-47-6 o-xylene 14 2238-07-5 Diglycidyl ether 15 122-60-1 Phenyl glycidyl ether 16 34590-94-8 Dipropylene glycol monomethyl ether 17 110-54-3 Hexane 18 109-99-9 Tetrahydrofuran 19 75-09-2 Dichloromethane 20 110-82-7 Cyclohexane
1 101-68-8 4,4'-Diphenylmethane diisocyanate 2 9016-00-6 Poly(dimethylsiloxane) 3 26471-62-5 Tolylene diisocyanate 4 100-42-5 Styrene 5 141-32-2 Butyl acrylate 6 107-13-1 Acrylonitrile 7 106-99-0 Buta-1,3-diene 8 75-38-7 1,1-difluoroethylene 9 9-38-9 Chlorotrifluoroethylene 10 111-44-4 2,2'-Dichlorodiethyl ether 11 1187-93-5 Trifluoromethyl trifluorovinyl ether 12 21645-51-2 Aluminum hydroxide 13 116-14-3 Tetrafluoroethene 14 116-15-4 Hexafluoropropylene 15 126-99-8 Chloroprene 16 103-11-7 2-Ethylhexyl acrylate 17 140-88-5 Ethyl acrylate 18 78-79-5 Isoprene 19 96-33-3 Methyl acrylate 20 1300-21-6 Dichloroethane
S.N CAS No. Item 1 9003-07-0 Poly(propylene) 2 25766-59-0 Polycarbonate resin 3 26062-94-2 Poly(butylene terephthalate) 4 9002-86-2 poly(vinyl chloride) 5 9002-88-4 Polythene 6 9003-56-9 ABS Resin 7 25212-74-2 Poly(1,4-phenylene sulfide) 8 25135-51-7 Polysulfone 9 110-63-4 Butane-1,4-diol 10 9003-35-4 Phenol-formaldehyde resin 11 9003-53-6 Polystyrene 12 9011-14-7 Poly(methyl methacrylate) 13 26009-03-0 Poly(2-Hydroxyacetic acid) 14 24980-41-4 Polycaprolactone 15 31533-76-3 Polyphenyl ether 16 29658-26-2 PEEK 17 9002-81-7 PolyoxyMethylene 18 26023-30-3 Polylactic acid 19 63428-84-2 Polyamide 20 25038-59-9 Polyethylene terephthalate