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Butanone
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== Applications == ===Solvent=== Butanone is an effective and common solvent<ref name="TurnerMcCreery">{{Cite book| last = Turner| first = Charles F.|author2=McCreery, Joseph W.| title = The Chemistry of Fire and Hazardous Materials| publisher = Allyn and Bacon, Inc.| year = 1981| location = Boston, Massachusetts| pages = 118| isbn = 0-205-06912-6}}</ref> and is used in processes involving [[natural gum|gum]]s, [[resin]]s, [[cellulose acetate]] and [[nitrocellulose]] coatings and in vinyl films.<ref name="Apps p101">{{Cite book| last = Apps| first = E. A.| title = Printing Ink Technology| publisher = Leonard Hill <nowiki>[Books]</nowiki> Limited| year = 1958|location = London| pages = [https://archive.org/details/printinginktechn00apps/page/101 101]| url =https://archive.org/details/printinginktechn00apps| url-access = registration}}</ref> For this reason it finds use in the manufacture of plastics, textiles, in the production of [[paraffin wax]], and in household products such as [[lacquer]], [[varnish]]es, paint remover, a denaturing agent for [[denatured alcohol]], [[adhesive|glues]], and as a cleaning agent. It is a prime component of plumbers' priming fluid, used to clean PVC materials. It has similar solvent properties to [[acetone]] but boils at a higher temperature and has a significantly slower evaporation rate.<ref name="Fairhall">{{Cite book| last = Fairhall| first = Lawrence T.| title = Industrial Toxicology| publisher = The Williams and Wilkins Company| year = 1957| location = Baltimore| pages = 172β173}}</ref> Unlike acetone, it forms an [[azeotrope]] with water,<ref name="Langes">''Lange's Handbook of Chemistry'', 10th ed. pp1496-1505</ref><ref name="crc">''CRC Handbook of Chemistry and Physics'', 44th ed. pp 2143-2184</ref> making it useful for azeotropic distillation of moisture in certain applications. Butanone is also used in [[dry erase marker]]s as the solvent of the erasable dye. The hydroxylamine derivative of butanone is [[methylethyl ketone oxime]] (MEKO), which also find use in paints and varnishes as an anti-skinning agent. ===Plastic welding=== <!-- courtesy note per WP:RSECT: [[Polystyrene cement]] links here --> As butanone dissolves [[polystyrene]] and many other plastics, it is sold as "model cement" for use in connecting parts of [[scale model]] kits. Though often considered an [[adhesive]], it is functioning as a [[plastic welding|welding]] agent in this context. ===Other uses=== Butanone is the [[Precursor (chemistry)|precursor]] to [[methyl ethyl ketone peroxide]], which is a catalyst for some [[polymerization]] reactions such as crosslinking of unsaturated polyester resins. [[Dimethylglyoxime]] can be prepared from butanone first by reaction with [[alkyl nitrites|ethyl nitrite]] to give [[diacetyl monoxime]] followed by conversion to the dioxime:<ref>{{OrgSynth | author = Semon, W. L. | author2 = Damerell, V. R. | title = Dimethylglyoxime | collvol = 2 | collvolpages = 204 | year = 1943 | prep = cv2p0204}}</ref> :[[File:Preparation_of_dimethylglyoxime.png|class=skin-invert-image|400px]] In the [[peroxide process]] on producing [[hydrazine]], the starting chemical ammonia is bonded to butanone, oxidized by hydrogen peroxide, bonded to another ammonia molecule. :[[File:Pechiney-Ugine-Kuhlmann process.png|class=skin-invert-image|506px]] In the final step of the process, hydrolysis produces the desired product, hydrazine, and regenerates the butanone. :Me(Et)C=NN=C(Et)Me + 2 H<sub>2</sub>O β 2 Me(Et)C=O + N<sub>2</sub>H<sub>4</sub>
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