VARNISHES AND /I lq LACQUERS B y REX FURNESS Tho mist6 of cinpiricisin wliicli surrou~idccl tho manufacture niitl npplicnt ions of artificial rcsins of the 1~1iriiol-fc~rmalcleliydc type wcrv lnrgcly dissipntctl by tlic ticicatific work niid tcchnicnl iiigcmtity of 1~nrl~c~lnrid, 11rchnii11, Le Bncl
Paracoumarone resin in varnishes
β Scribed by J.S.H.
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1920
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 62 KB
- Volume
- 190
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0016-0032
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β¦ Synopsis
However, Arthur Lapworth and Leonore K. Pearson, of the University of Manchester, England, have devised a method for the chemical decomposition of fats with the production of glycerol and an edible by-product--the mannitol esters of the fatty acids, which are synthetic fats and oils. This research is described in the Biochemical Journal, i9~9, xiii, 296-300. Olein, such as olive oil or stearin, is mixed with mannitol and a small amount of dry sodium ethoxide which functions as a catalyst. The mixture is distilled under reduced pressure. The distillate consists of glycerol, water, and a small amount of alcohol. The residue in the distillation vessel is a substance which possesses many of the properties of the original fat; in chemical compositions it corresponds closely to a mixture of the dioleates or distearates of mannitan and isomannide. The maximum yield of glycerol is obtained when fat and mannitol are mixed in the ratio of two molecules of the former and three molecules of the latter.
J. S. H.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Vnrilishcs for usc as insulating mcdia on t h e cbils of olcctrical transformers or motor windings must liarc special propertics which many ordinary \rarnishos m d lacquers do not posscss.