epichlorohydrin

epichlorohydrin
/ep'i klawr'euh huy"drin, -klohr'-/, n. Chem.
a highly volatile liquid with a chloroformlike odor, C3H5ClO: used as a solvent for resins and in the production of epoxy and phenoxy resins.
[EPI- + CHLOROHYDRIN]

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Epichlorohydrin — Chembox new Reference= [ Merck Index , 12th Edition, 3648.] Name = (±) Epichlorohydrin ImageFile = Epichlorohydrin.png ImageName = Epichlorohydrin ImageFile1 = Epichlorohydrin 3D balls.png ImageName1 = Ball and stick model of the epichlorohydrin… …   Wikipedia

  • epichlorohydrin — epichlorhidrinas statusas T sritis chemija formulė Formulę žr. priede. priedas( ai) Grafinis formatas atitikmenys: angl. epichlorohydrin rus. эпихлоргидрин ryšiai: sinonimas – 1 chlor 2,3 epoksipropanas …   Chemijos terminų aiškinamasis žodynas

  • epichlorohydrin — noun Date: circa 1891 a volatile liquid toxic epoxide C3H5ClO having a chloroform odor and used especially in making epoxy resins and rubbers …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • epichlorohydrin — noun any epihalohydrin in which the halogen is chlorine …   Wiktionary

  • epichlorohydrin — epi·chlo·ro·hy·drin (ep″ə klor″o hiґdrin) a solvent for resins, paints, varnishes, and other organic compounds; it is strongly irritant to the skin and is carcinogenic. Called also chloropropylene oxide …   Medical dictionary

  • epichlorohydrin — epi·chlorohydrin …   English syllables

  • epichlorohydrin — |epə̇, |epē+ noun Etymology: epi + chlorohydrin : a volatile liquid toxic epoxide C3H5ClO having an odor like chloroform, made usually by alkaline hydrolysis of dichlorohydrins, and used chiefly in making epoxy resins * * * /ep i klawr euh huy… …   Useful english dictionary

  • EC-TEOLA — epichlorohydrin triethanolamine …   Medical dictionary

  • EC-TEOLA — • epichlorohydrin triethanolamine …   Dictionary of medical acronyms & abbreviations

  • Glycerol — Glycerine and Glycerin redirect here. For the Bush song, see Glycerine (song). Glycerol …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”