- Title
- An investigation of the structural problems in relation to some synthetic waxes
- Creator
- Stokhuyzen, Rolf
- Subject
- Chemistry, Analytic
- Subject
- Waxes
- Subject
- Synthetic products
- Date Issued
- 1970
- Date
- 1970
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Masters
- Type
- MSc
- Identifier
- vital:4443
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007695
- Identifier
- Chemistry, Analytic
- Identifier
- Waxes
- Identifier
- Synthetic products
- Description
- From Introduction: Wax and wax-like substances have been defined in many ways. One reasonably extensive definition, by Hatt and Lamberton (1956) is given below: "The term "wax" seems best used to denote a group of substances which qualitatively have certain physical properties in common. These properties are familiar ones, for in almost all countries some natural wax - beeswax, Japan wax, Chinese insect wax, the carnauba and candelilla waxes of the Americas - has been an important material in art and industry from prehistoric times. Waxes are understood to be opaque or translucent solids, which melt without decomposition to form mobile liquids at temperatures in the region of 100⁰C. They differ in hardness, but are all essentially soft substances with poor mechanical strength. Most waxes can be easily shaped or kneaded at a little above ambient temperatures. In fact, the term could easily have been made to cover the whole class now named thermoplastics." Pure n-paraffins would be too crystalline and brittle for use as waxes, whereas mixtures of n-paraffins have some valuable properties. The molecules bear such close resemblance to one another that they form mixed crystals of lowered crystallinity and the melting point is a function of the mean molecular weight. This is a desirable feature for it permits crystallinity and brittleness to be reduced without a marked loss in the melting point or hardness. It also allows a mixture to simulate a pure compound very closely. Waxes, in general, have been put to a large number of uses. They are used, for example, in candles, polishes, paper-coating, plastics, printing, matches, rust protectants and insulation. Each application requires its own appropriate range of wax properties.
- Format
- 206 p.
- Format
- Publisher
- Rhodes University
- Publisher
- Faculty of Science, Chemistry
- Language
- English
- Rights
- Stokhuyzen, Rolf
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