Kerosene: Kerosene (Kerosine, Paraffin Oil Approximately Boiling Range: 205 To
Kerosene: Kerosene (Kerosine, Paraffin Oil Approximately Boiling Range: 205 To
Kerosene: Kerosene (Kerosine, Paraffin Oil Approximately Boiling Range: 205 To
283
KEROSENE
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KEVLAR
See Polyamides.
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KRYPTON
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LACTIC ACID
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LEAD AZIDE
See Explosives.
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LEAD CARBONATE
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LEAD CHROMATE
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LEAD STYPHNATE
See Explosives.
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LIGNIN
See Lignosulfonates.
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LIGNOSULFONATES
Lignosulfonates are metal salts of the sulfonated products of lignin and are
a by-product of the pulp and paper industry. Pulping of wood with a sulfite
solution dissolves the lignin portion, leaving behind the cellulose fibers
that are processed into paper. The sulfite solution is concentrated and the
resulting solids sold as lignosulfonates. Only a small amount of the spent
sulfite liquor solids is used each year. The rest is burned to recover heat. A
molecular weight of 250 for the lignosulfonate monomer is approximate,
but the product may contain material with a molecular weight as high as
100,000. Liquor from an alkaline sulfate pulping process can be concen-
trated to give a solid called alkali lignin, but little of this is used except
as fuel.
The uses of lignosulfonates include the manufacture of binders, adhe-
sives, surfactants, animal feed additives, and vanilla.
See Lignin.
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LIME
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Linear hydrocarbons with a double bond at the end of the carbon chain are
produced by the polymerization, or more correctly, the oligomerization of
ethylene.
(n+2)CH2=CH2 → CH3CH2(CH2CH2)nCH=CH2
Compounds with 6 to18 carbons are the most common alpha olefins
(α-olefins) and Ziegler catalysts are used in this process. Certain olefins
such as nonene (C9) and dodecene (C12) can also be made by cracking and
dehydrogenation of n-paraffins, as practiced in the petrochemical section
of a refinery.
Linear alpha olefins can be copolymerized with polyethylene to form
linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) and 1-hexene (C6) and 1-octene
(C8) are especially useful for this purpose. In addition, linear alpha olefins
are used to make detergent alcohols, oxo alcohols for plasticizers, lubri-
cants, lube oil additives, and surfactants are other important products from
linear alpha olefins.
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Liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) is used for domestic and industrial heating,
flame weeding, tobacco curing, grain drying, and in motor vehicles, as
well as for the petrochemical industry.
The constituents of liquefied petroleum gas [propane (CH3CH2CH3)
and/or butane (CH3CH2CH2CH3)] occur as constituents of wet natural gas
or crude oil or as a by-product from refining. For example, a natural gaso-
line plant treats raw wet natural gas through absorption by washing with
gas oil and fractionating out the usable fraction.
Butane can be used for the manufacture of maleic acid (thence to
maleic anhydride), from which tetrahydrofuran is made by hydrogena-
tion. Liquefied petroleum gas is also a feedstock for aromatics production
(Fig. 1).
Hydrogen and
fuel gas
Liquefied
Catalyst regeneration
petroleum gas
Low-pressure
separator
Stacked reactors
Stripper
Aromatics
Recycle to reactor
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LITHIUM SALTS
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LITHOPONE
Barytes
Coal
Thickeners
Precipitating
Grinding, Furnace tank
mixing
Lithopone
FIGURE 2 Manufacture of lithopone.
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Scrap zinc or concentrated zinc ores are dissolved in sulfuric acid, the
solution is purified, and the two solutions are reacted. A heavy mixed
precipitate results that is 28 to 30% zinc sulfide and 72 to 70% barium
sulfate.