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BUTYLGLYCOL

EC / List no.: 203-905-0
CAS no.: 111-76-2
Mol. formula: C6H14O2

Butyl glycol (also known as BG, Butyl glycol, glycol monobutyl ether and ethylene glycol monobutyl ether, butyl cellosolve, butoxyethanol) is a clear, colourless, oily liquid with a unique sweet yet mild odour and has the formula C6H14O2. 
Butyl glycol is a butyl ether of ethylene glycol and is miscible with water and common organic solvents. 
Butyl glycol has been produced industrially for over half a century and is used primarily as a solvent in paints and surface coatings but also in inks and cleaning products.

High-boiling, low-volatility liquid with a mild odor that is used as a solvent and starting material for syntheses. 
Excellent co-solvent in aqueous coating systems (water-based paints). 


Properties 
Colorless, neutral, slightly hygroscopic, mobile liquid with a mild odor. 
The product is miscible with water and common organic solvents in all proportions at room temperature.
Butylglycol shows the reactions typical of an alcohol, such as esterification, etherification, oxidation and the formation of acetates and alcoholates. 
Like most ethers, it forms peroxides in the presence of atmospheric oxygen. 


Technical Properties
Chemical and physical properties of butyl glycol:

Molecular Formula: C6H14O2 / CH3(CH2)2CH2OCH2CH2OH

Synonyms: 2-Butoxyethanol, Butyl Cellosolve, Butyl Monoether Glycol, Ethylene Glycol Monobutyl Ether (EGBE), Butoxyethanol

Cas Number: 111-76-2
Molecular Mass: 118.176 g/mol1
Exact Mass: 118.09938 g/mol
Flashpoint: 153 °F / 67 °C
Boiling Point: 340 °F / 171 °C
Melting Point: -107 °F / -77 °C
Vapour Pressure: 0.76 mm Hg at 68 ° F
Water Solubility: ≥ 100 mg/ml (72° F)
Density: 0.90 g/cm3
Log P: 0.83

How is it Produced?
Butyl glycol is produced by reacting ethylene oxide with an alcohol such as normal butanol (nbutanol) within a catalyst. 
This process is called ethoxylation. 
If the ratio of ethylene oxide to nbutanol is greater than one then di- and tri- ethylene glycol monoethers are also produced.

Below is the chemical equation for this reaction:

C2H4O + C4H9OH → C4H9OC2H4OH

World production is estimated at between 300-500 KT per annum. 
Butyl glycol can also be produced through the etherification of butanol with 2-chloroethanol.

How is Butyl Glycol Used?
Butyl glycol has many uses, primarily as a solvent, in both the commercial and industrial industries.

Industry Uses:
Butyl glycol usage is dominated by the paint industry which consumes approximately 75 % of all the BG produced. 
This is because it is a low volatility solvent and can therefore both extend the drying times of coatings and improve their flow.

Other applications include use as a solvent in printing inks due to its high boiling point, textile dyes and as a component of hydraulic fluids. 
Butyl glycol is also a component of drilling and cutting oils and is a major component of Corexit glycol 9527, which is an oil spill dispersant product.

Butyl glycol is also a chemical intermediate and, as such, is a starting material in the production of butyl glycol acetate which is, itself, an excellent solvent. 
Butyl glycol is also a starting material in the production of plasticisers by the reaction of phthalic anhydride.

Commercial Uses:
Butyl glycol is used regularly in most households as Butyl glycol is a component of many home cleaning products. 
Butyl glycol provides excellent cleaning power for domestic cleaning products and also provides the characteristic odour that we associate with them. 
Butyl glycol also plays the same role in some industrial and commercial surface cleaners.

Many other products contain butyl glycol including spray lacquers, varnishes, varnish removers, paints, liquid soaps, degreasers, leather protectors, whiteboard cleaners, printing pastes, enamels, cosmetics and herbicides.

Butylglycol is an organic compound with the chemical formula BuOC2H4OH (Bu = CH3CH2CH2CH2). 
This colorless liquid has a sweet, ether-like odor, as it derives from the family of glycol ethers, and is a butyl ether of ethylene glycol. 
As a relatively nonvolatile, inexpensive solvent, it is used in many domestic and industrial products because of its properties as a surfactant. 
Butyl glycol is a known respiratory irritant and can be acutely toxic but animal studies did not find it to be mutagenic, and no studies suggest it is a human carcinogen.
A study of 13 classroom air contaminants conducted in Portugal reported a statistically significant association with increased rates of nasal obstruction, the study also reported a positive association below the level of statistical significance with a higher risk of obese asthma and increased child BMI.


Production
Butyl glycol is commonly obtained through two processes; the ethoxylation reaction of butanol and ethylene oxide in the presence of a catalyst:

C2H4O + C4H9OH → C4H9OC2H4OH
or the etherification of butanol with 2-chloroethanol.
Butyl glycol can be obtained in the laboratory by performing a ring opening of 2-propyl-1,3-dioxolane with boron trichloride.
Butyl glycol is often produced industrially by combining ethylene glycol and butyraldehyde in a Parr reactor with palladium on carbon.

In 2006, the European production of butyl glycol ethers amounted to 181 kilotons, of which approximately 50% (90 kt/a) was 2-butoxyethanol. 
World production is estimated to be 200 to 500 kt/a, of which 75% is for paints and coatings and 18% for metal cleaners and household cleaners.
In the US, it is considered a High Production Volume Chemical because greater than 100 million pounds of this chemical are produced per year.

Uses:
Butyl glycol is a glycol ether with modest surfactant properties, which can also be used as a mutual solvent]. 
In use since the 1930s, glycol ethers are solvents that dissolve both water-soluble and hydrophobic substances. 
Glycol ethers consist of two components, an alcohol and ether. 
According to the nature of alcohol, molecules of this class can be divided into two groups: 
E series and P series which correspond to ethylene and propylene respectively. 
Glycol ethers are selected for specific purposes, such as solubility, inflammability, and volatility.

Commercial uses:
Butyl glycol is a solvent for paints and surface coatings, as well as cleaning products and inks.
Products that contain 2-butoxyethanol include acrylic resin formulations, asphalt release agents, firefighting foam, leather protectors, oil spill dispersants, degreaser applications, photographic strip solutions, whiteboard cleaners, liquid soaps, cosmetics, dry cleaning solutions, lacquers, varnishes, herbicides, latex paints, enamels, printing paste, and varnish removers, and silicone caulk. Products containing this compound are commonly found at construction sites, automobile repair shops, print shops, and facilities that produce sterilizing and cleaning products. 
Butyl glycol is the main ingredient of many home, commercial and industrial cleaning solutions. 
Since the molecule has both non-polar and polar ends, butoxyethanol is useful for removing both polar and non-polar substances, like grease and oils. 
Butyl glycol is also approved by the U.S. FDA to be used as direct and indirect food additives, which include antimicrobial agents, defoamers, stabilizers, and adhesives.

In the petroleum industry
Butyl glycol is commonly produced for the oil industry because of its surfactant properties.

In the petroleum industry, 2-butoxyethanol is a component of fracturing fluids, drilling stabilizers, and oil slick dispersants for both water-based and oil-based hydraulic fracturing.
When liquid is pumped into the well, the fracturing fluids are pumped under extreme pressure, so 2-butoxyethanol is used to stabilize them by lowering the surface tension.
As a surfactant, 2-butoxyethanol adsorbs at the oil-water interface of the fracture.
The compound is also used to facilitate the release of the gas by preventing congealing.
Butyl glycol is also used as a crude oil-water coupling solvent for more general oil well workovers.
Because of its surfactant properties, it is a major constituent (30–60% w/w) in the oil spill dispersant Corexit 9527, which was widely used in the aftermath of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

Butyl glycol (also known as BG, 2-butoxyethanol, glycol monobutyl ether and ethylene glycol monobutyl ether) is a clear, colourless, oily liquid with a characteristic, but mild, odour. 
Butyl glycol is miscible with water and with common organic solvents and has the formula C6H14O2. 
Butyl glycol has been produced commercially for over half a century where it is most commonly used in the paint industry.


Butyl Glycol is a colourless, slightly hygroscopic liquid with mild, characteristic odour. 
Also known as 2-Butoxyethanol, ethylene glycol mono butyl ether and butyl glycol ether this product is fully miscible in water and a wide variety of organic solvents.

Used primarily within the paints, inks and coatings industries, butyl glycol is a low volatility solvent capable of improving flow and extending drying times. 
Butyl glycol is also a commonly found ingredient in many waxes, resins, textile dyes and even cleaning products for its cleaning ability.


Butyl Glycol is an organic solvent which is a clear, colourless liquid with an ether-like odour. 
Butyl glycol is a butyl ether of ethylene glycol. 
Butyl glycol is completely miscible with water and most organic solvents making it very versatile as an ingredient in cleaners, degreasers, paints, varnishes etc. 
Butyl glycol is usually produced by a reaction of ethylene oxide with butyl alcohol, but it may also be made by the reaction of ethylene glycol with dibutyl sulfate.

Specification

Formula: C6H14O2
CAS No: 111-76-2
EINECS No: 203-908-0
Appearance: clourless to light yellow liquid
Molar mass: 118.17 g mol-1
Density: 0.90 g/cm3 liquid
Melting Point: -77oC
Boiling Point: 171oC
Flash Point: 67oC
Autoignition temperature: 245oC
Flammability limits: Upper 12.7% Lower 1.1%
Viscosity: 2.9 cP at 25 C
Vapour pressure: 1.17 hPa at 25C
Refractive index: 1.419
Vapor Density (Air=1): 4.07
Vapor Pressure (mm Hg): 0.8 @ 20C
Evaporation Rate (BuAc=1): 0.07
Solubility: completely miscible with water
Other Names: butyl cellosolve, butyl glycol, ethylene glycol, monobutyl ether, Dowanol, Eastman EB solvent, 1-Hydroxy-2-butoxyethane;


Butyl glycol shows the reactions typical of an alcohol, such as esterification, etherification, oxidation and the formation of acetates and alcoholates. 
Like most ethers, it forms peroxides in the presence of atmospheric oxygen.

USES FOR Butyl glycol

Butyl glycol is widely used as a solvent in protective surface coatings such as spray lacquers, quick-dry lacquers, enamels, varnishes, and latex paints. 
Butyl glycol is also used as an ingredient in paint thinners and strippers, varnish removers, agricultural chemicals, herbicides, silicon caulks, cutting oils, and hydraulic fluids. 
Butyl glycol has other uses in metal cleaners, fabric dyes and inks, industrial and household cleaners (as a degreaser), and dry-cleaning compounds.

Key Areas of use:
A solvent in paints, acrylic resin formulations, varnishes, lacquer and inks
Butyl glycol reduces the viscosity of alkyd resin paints.
A flow improver for urea, melamine or phenolic stoving finishes.
Used in water soluble solvent degreasers and cleaning products.
An oil spill dispersant.
Used in hydraulic fluids.
Asphalt release agent
Photographic strip solution
Used in Firefighting foam.
In herbicides.
In the production of butyl glycol acetate.
With regards to environmental issues, Butyl glycol decomposes in the presence of air within a few days and has not been identified as a major environmental contaminant. 
Butyl glycol is not known to bioaccumulate.


Butyl Glycol ether provides excellent performance in coatings, cleaners, and many other types of products. 
Butyl glycol is one of the fastest evaporating glycol ethers. 
Butyl glycol ether is compatible with a wide range of resin types, and it also offers 100% water solubility.

Butyl glycol also known as BG, 2-butoxyethanol, glycol monobutyl ether and ethylene glycol monobutyl ether is a clear, colourless, oily liquid with a characteristic, but mild, odour with the molecular formula C6H14O2, CAS: 111-76-2.  
Butyl glycol is miscible with water and with common organic solvents. 


production
Butyl glycol is produced by reacting ethylene oxide and normal butanol (n-butanol) using a catalyst.  If the ratio of ethylene oxide to n-butanol is greater than one then di- and tri- ethylene glycol monoethers are also produced.

World production is estimated at between 300-500 KT per annum.

Butyl glycol has a specific gravity of 0.9 and a flash point of 60 °C

Uses:
Butyl glycol usage is dominated by the paint industry which consumes approximately 75 % of all the BG produced.  
This is because it is a low volatility solvent and it can therefore both extend the drying times of coatings and improve their flow.

Other applications include use as a solvent in printing inks and textile dyes and as a component of hydraulic fluids.  
Butyl glycol is also a component of drilling and cutting oils and is a major component of Corexit 9527, which is an oil spill dispersant product.

Butyl glycol is also a chemical intermediate and, as such, is a starting material in the production of butyl glycol acetate which is, itself, an excellent solvent. 
Butyl glycol is also a starting material in the production of plasticisers by the reaction of phthalic anhydride. 
Butyl glycol is also something that is used regularly in most households as it is a component of many home cleaning products.  
Butyl glycol provides very good cleaning power for domestic cleaning products and also provides the characteristic odour that we associate with many of these products.  
Butyl glycol also plays the same role in some industrial and commercial surface cleaners.


Description    
Butyl glycol is a clear, colourless liquid with ether-like smell.
Butyl glycol is usually produced by a reaction of ethylene oxide with butyl alcohol, but it may also be made by the reaction of ethylene glycol with dibutyl sulphate. 
Butyl glycol is widely used as a solvent in protective surface coatings such as spray lacquers, quick-dry lacquers, enamels, varnishes, and latex paints. 
Butyl glycol is also used as an ingredient in paint thinners and strippers, varnish removers, agricultural chemicals, herbicides, silicon caulks, cutting oils, and hydraulic fluids and as metal cleaners, fabric dyes and inks, industrial and household cleaners (as a degreaser), and dry-cleaning compounds. 
Butyl glycol is also used in liquid soaps and in cosmetics. 
Butyl glycol acetate has been reported to be present in air, water, and soil as a contaminant and exposure to it occurs during its manufacture and use as an intermediate in the chemical industry, and during the formulation and use of its products in multiple industrial activities. 
The acetate form of 2-butoxyethanol is 2-butoxyethanol acetate and also known as ethylene glycol monobutyl ether acetate.

Chemical Properties    
Ethylene glycol monobutyl ether is a colorless liquid with a mild, rancid, ether-like odor. 
Butyl glycol is miscible in alI proportions with many ketones, ethers, alcohols, aromatic paraffin and halogenated hydrocarbons. 
More specifically, it mixes in all proportions with acetone, benzene, carbon tetrachloride, ethyl ether, n-heptane and water. 
Because of its excellent solvency, low evaporation rate and high dilution ratios, it is used as a solvent in the manufacture and formulation of lacquers, enamels, inks and varnishes, employing such resins as alkyd, phenolic, nitrocellulose, maleic modified, styrene and epoxy.
In lacquers butyl "Cellosolve" imparts a slow evaporation rate, strengthens blush resistance, heightens gloss, improves flow-out and helps prevent orange peel.
Hot spray lacquers usually contain about 10% of "Dowanol" EB based on the solvent-diluent weight.

Butyl glycol is a clear colorless liquid with an ether-like smell and belongs to the family of glycol ether/alkoxy alcohol. 
Butyl glycol is miscible in water and soluble in most organic solvents. 
Butyl glycol does not occur naturally. 
Butyl glycol is usually produced by reacting ethylene oxide with butyl alcohol.

Butyl glycol is used as a solvent for nitrocellulose, natural and synthetic resins, soluble oils, in surface coatings, spray lacquers, enamels, varnishes, and latex paints, as an ingredient in paint thinners, quick-dry lacquers, latex paint, and strippers, varnish removers, and herbicides. 
Butyl glycol is also used in textile dyeing and printing, in the treatment of leather, in the production of plasticizers, as a stabilizer in metal cleaners and household cleaners, and in hydraulic fl uids, insecticides, herbicides, and rust removers. 
Butyl glycol is also used as an ingredient in liquid soaps, cosmetics, industrial and household cleaners, dry-cleaning compounds, and as an ingredient in silicon caulks, cutting oils, and hydraulic fluids. Butyl glycol is a fire hazard when exposed to heat, sparks, or open flames.

Physical properties    
Clear, colorless, oily liquid with a mild, ether-like odor. 
Experimentally determined detection and recognition odor threshold concentrations were 500 μg/m3 (100 ppbv) and 1.7 mg/m3 (350 ppbv), respectively (Hellman and Small, 1974). 
An odor threshold concentration of 580 ppbv was reported by Nagata and Takeuchi (1990).

Uses:
Butyl glycol is used widely as a coupling solvent because of its superior coupling efficiency and excellent solvency for resins.
Butyl glycol is used as a solvent for nitrocellulose, resins, oil, and grease, and in dry cleaning.
Solvent for nitrocellulose, resins, grease, oil, albumin; dry cleaning.
Synthesis Reference(s)    The Journal of Organic Chemistry, 45, p. 1095, 1980 DOI: 10.1021/jo01294a034

General Description    
A colorless liquid with a mild, pleasant odor. Less dense than water. 
Flash point 160°F. 
Irritates skin and eyes and may be toxic by ingestion.
Used as a solvent and to make paints and varnish.

Use and Manufacturing
Household & Commercial/Institutional Products
• Auto Products
• Commercial / Institutional
• Hobby/Craft
• Home Maintenance
• Home Office
• Inside the Home
• Landscaping/Yard
• Personal Care
• Pesticides

Both oil base and water base fracturing fluids are being used in the fracturing industry. 
Water base, which includes alcohol-water mixtures and low strength acids, make up the majority of treating fluids. 
The common chemicals added to these fluids are polymers for viscosity development, crosslinkers for viscosity enhancement, pH control chemicals, gel breakers for polymer degradation following the treatment, surfactants, clay stabilizers, alcohol, bactericides, fluid loss additives and friction reducer.

Hydraulic fracturing uses a specially blended liquid which is pumped into a well under extreme pressure causing cracks in rock formations underground. 
These cracks in the rock then allow oil and natural gas to flow, increasing resource production. ... Chemical Name: 2-Butoxyethanol; Chemical Purpose: Product stabilizer; Product Function: surfactant.


Industry Uses:
Accelerator or Catalyst
Adhesives and sealant chemicals
Catalyst
Fuels and fuel additives
Functional fluids (open systems)
Intermediates
Lubricants and lubricant additives
PAINT
Paint additives and coating additives not described by other categories
Pigments
Plastic
Plastic related
Plating agents and surface treating agents
Processing aids, not otherwise listed
Processing aids, specific to petroleum production
Solvents (for cleaning and degreasing)
Solvents (which become part of product formulation or mixture)
Surface active agents

Consumer Uses:
Anti-freeze and de-icing products
Building/construction materials not covered elsewhere
Cleaning and furnishing care products
Electrical and electronic products
Fuels and related products
Ink, toner, and colorant products
Laboratory Use
Lubricants and greases
Metal products not covered elsewhere
Paints and coatings
Personal care products

General Manufacturing Information
Industry Processing Sectors
Adhesive manufacturing
All other basic inorganic chemical manufacturing
All other basic organic chemical manufacturing
All other chemical product and preparation manufacturing
Carbon black manufacturing
Construction
Fabricated metal product manufacturing
Laboratory Use
Miscellaneous manufacturing
Oil and gas drilling, extraction, and support activities
Paint and coating manufacturing
Petrochemical manufacturing
Petroleum lubricating oil and grease manufacturing
Plastic material and resin manufacturing
Plastics product manufacturing
Printing ink manufacturing
Services
Soap, cleaning compound, and toilet preparation manufacturing
Synthetic dye and pigment manufacturing
Transportation equipment manufacturing
Wholesale and retail trade

Butyl glycol is a high production volume glycol ether. 
Butyl glycol is a colorless liquid that is miscible in water and soluble in most organic solvents. 
Butyl glycol is used widely as a solvent in surface coatings, such as spray lacquers, quick dry lacquers, enamels, varnishes, varnish removers and latex paint.

Butyl Glycol ether provides excellent performance in coatings, cleaners, and many other types of products. 
Butyl glycol is one of the fastest evaporating glycol ethers. 
Butyl glycol ether is compatible with a wide range of resin types, and it also offers 100% water solubility.


Butylglycol - an organic compound from the group of glycol ethers. 
Butyl glycol is C6H14O2 ethylene glycol butyl ether. 
Butyl glycol is widely used as an organic solvent in professional and consumer chemistry. 
Butyl glycol is widely used in cleaning agents, paints and coatings. Butylglycol is used in the mining and construction industries.
Butyl glycol - organic solvent from the group of glycol ethers. 
Due to the polar-non-polar structure of the molecule, it dissolves both water-soluble and water-insoluble substances. 
Butyl glycol is widely used as an ingredient in cleaning agents and pigments. 
The Butyl glycol solvent is used in the paints, varnishes and acrylic resins industry. 
Butyl glycol is used in degreasing agents in industrial and professional chemistry. 
Butyl glycol is used as an ingredient in alkaline preparations for foam car washing. 
In professional chemistry it is used in concentrates for washing glass surfaces. 
Butyl glycol is used as a component of agents for removing residues and dirt from polymer dispersions. Butylglycol is used in dirt removal products in car workshops, printers and construction sites. 
Butyl glycol is approved as a food additive and is used in biocides, antifoams and stabilizers. 
Butyl glycol is used in the petroleum industry for its good surfactant properties in fracturing fluids and drilling stabilizers. Butyl glycol is also used as an anti-clotting ingredient. 
The use of butyl glycol as a reagent in synthesis processes is also known.

In addition, butyl glycol is used:
• in cleaning products for dry-wipe boards
• production of silicone gaskets
• production of latex paints
• production of cleaners
• herbicide production
• cosmetics production

ADDITIONAL PROPERTIES:
Name of substance: Butylglycol
Synonyms: ethylene glycol butyl ether, butyl glycol, 2-butoxyethanol
Chemical formula: C6H14O2
CAS: 111-76-2
Molar mass: 118.18 g / mol
Content: 99.7%
Physical state: liquid
Color: colorless
Water solubility: complete; 900 g / l at 25 ºC
Density: 20ºC: 0.9 g / cm3
Boiling point: 168-172ºC
Melting point: -75ºC
Flash point: approx. 63 ºC


About Butyl glycol
Helpful information
Butyl glycol is registered under the REACH Regulation and is manufactured in and / or imported to the European Economic Area, at ≥ 100 000 to < 1 000 000 tonnes per annum.

Butyl glycol is used by consumers, by professional workers (widespread uses), in formulation or re-packing, at industrial sites and in manufacturing.

Consumer Uses:
Butyl glycol is used in the following products: coating products and washing & cleaning products. Other release to the environment of Butyl glycol is likely to occur from: indoor use (e.g. machine wash liquids/detergents, automotive care products, paints and coating or adhesives, fragrances and air fresheners) and outdoor use.

Article service life
ECHA has no public registered data on the routes by which Butyl glycol is most likely to be released to the environment. ECHA has no public registered data indicating whether or into which articles the substance might have been processed.

Widespread uses by professional workers
Butyl glycol is used in the following products: coating products, oil and gas exploration or production products, fillers, putties, plasters, modelling clay, metal surface treatment products, polymers and washing & cleaning products.
Butyl glycol is used in the following areas: mining.
Butyl glycol is used for the manufacture of: chemicals.
Other release to the environment of Butyl glycol is likely to occur from: outdoor use and indoor use (e.g. machine wash liquids/detergents, automotive care products, paints and coating or adhesives, fragrances and air fresheners).
Formulation or re-packing
Butyl glycol is used in the following products: coating products, polymers, oil and gas exploration or production products, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics and personal care products, extraction agents and fillers, putties, plasters, modelling clay.
Release to the environment of Butyl glycol can occur from industrial use: formulation of mixtures.
Uses at industrial sites
Butyl glycol is used in the following products: oil and gas exploration or production products, coating products, polymers, pharmaceuticals and cosmetics and personal care products.
Butyl glycol is used in the following areas: mining.
Butyl glycol is used for the manufacture of: chemicals.
Release to the environment of Butyl glycol can occur from industrial use: in processing aids at industrial sites, as an intermediate step in further manufacturing of another substance (use of intermediates) and of substances in closed systems with minimal release.
Manufacture
Release to the environment of Butyl glycol can occur from industrial use: manufacturing of the substance and formulation of mixtures.


IUPAC NAMES:
1-Butoxy-2-hydroxyethan
2 butossietanolo
2-buthoxtethanol
2-Butoksietanol
2-butoxy ethanol
2-butoxy-1-ethanol 
2-butoxy-ethanol
2-butoxyehanole
2-Butoxyethan-1-ol
2-butoxyethan-1-ol
2-Butoxyethano
2-BUTOXYETHANOL
2-Butoxyethanol
2-butoxyethanol
2-Butoxyethanol
2-butoxyethanol
2-butoxyethanol (Butyl glycol)
2-butoxyethanol ethylene glycol monobutyl ether butyl cellosolve
2-butoxyethanol, butyl cellosolve, ethylene glycol monobutyl ether
2-Butoxyethanol; Butyl glycol; Butyl cellosolve ...
2-butoxyethanol; ethylene glycol monobutyl ether; butyl cellosolve
2-butoxyéthanol
Butoxyethanol
butyl cellosolve
Butyl cellosolvee
butyl glycol
butyl glycol
Butyl Oxitol
Butylglycol
butylglycol ether
CH2OHCH2CH2CH2OCH2CH2OCH2CH2OH
Ethanol, 2-butoxy-
ethanol, 2-butoxy-
ethylene
Ethylene glycol butyl ether
ethylene glycol butyl ether
Ethylene glycol butyl ether
Ethylene glycol butylether
Ethylene glycol mono butyl ether
ethylene glycol mono butyl ether
Ethylene glycol mono-n-butyl ether
Ethylene Glycol Monobutyl
ETHYLENE GLYCOL MONOBUTYL ETHER
Ethylene Glycol Monobutyl Ether
ethylene glycol monobutyl ether
ethylenglykol butyl ether
UPV13

SYNONYMS:
2-(1-butoxy)ethanol
2-be
2-Butossi-etanolo
2-Butoxy-1-ethanol
2-Butoxy-aethanol
2-Butoxyethan-1-ol
2-butoxy-ethano
2-butoxyethanol (butyl cellosolve)
2-butoxyethanol(ethyleneglycolmonobutyl
EthyleneglycolMonobutylEther,>99%
Ethylene glycol monobutyl ether(EB)
Butyl glycol (=butylglycol)
O-Butyl ethylene glycol
o-butylethyleneglycol
Poly-Solv EB
poly-solveb
2-butoxyethanol(ethyleneglycolmonobutylether)
2-Hydroxyethyl n-butyl ether
3-Oxa-1-heptanol
3-Oxaheptan-1-ol
a13-0993
beta-Butoxyethanol
BuCs
Butoksyetylowy alkohol
butoksyetylowyalkohol
butoksyetylowyalkohol(polish)
butoxyethanol(non-specificname)
Butyglycol
Butyl 2-hydroxyethyl ether
Butyl Cellu-Sol
Butyl icinol
Butyl monoether glycol
Butyl2-hydroxyethylether
butylcellu-sol
Butylcelosolv
butylcelosolv(czech)
butylglycol(french,german)
caswellno121
Chimec NR
chimecnr
Dowanol EB
dowanoleb
egbe
Ektasolve eb
ektasolveeb
epapesticidechemicalcode011501
etermonobutilicodeletilenglicol
Ethane-1,2-diolbutylether
Ethanol, 2-butoxy-
Ether alcohol
BUTYL CELLULOSE
2-Butoxyethanol, scintillation grade
butycel
2-butoxyethanol ethylene glycol monobutyl ether butyl cellosolve
Butyl Glycol (Butyl Cellosolve)
2-N-BUTOXYETHANOL 99% AR
2-BUTOXYETHANOL GC STANDARD
BUTYLETHYLENEGLYCOL
2-Butoxyethanol
111-76-2
ETHYLENE GLYCOL MONOBUTYL ETHER
Butyl cellosolve
Butyl glycol
Butoxyethanol
Ethanol, 2-butoxy-
n-Butoxyethanol
Ethylene glycol butyl ether
Butyl oxitol
Glycol butyl ether
Glycol ether eb
3-Oxa-1-heptanol
2-butoxyethan-1-ol
EGBE
Dowanol EB
2-Butoxy-1-ethanol
Gafcol EB
Butylglycol
Poly-Solv EB
O-Butyl ethylene glycol
Jeffersol eb
Butyl cellu-sol
BUCS
Ektasolve EB
Glycol monobutyl ether
Chimec NR
2-Butoxy ethanol
2-Butossi-etanolo
2-Butoxy-aethanol
2-n-Butoxyethanol
Butylcelosolv
Butoksyetylowy alkohol
2-Butoxy-ethanol
Ethylene glycol n-butyl ether
EGMBE
Monobutyl glycol ether
Monobutyl ether of ethylene glycol
Ethylene glycol mono-n-butyl ether
n-Butyl Cellosolve
.beta.-Butoxyethanol
ethyleneglycol monobutyl ether
Butyglycol
Monobutyl ethylene glycol ether
2-n-Butoxy-1-ethanol
Ether alcohol
Ethylene glycol, monobutyl ether
Butyl icinol
UNII-I0P9XEZ9WV
Minex BDH
NSC 60759
2-Hydroxyethyl n-butyl ether
2-Butoxyethanol (ethylene glycol monobutyl ether)
Butyl monoether glycol
Eter monobutilico del etilenglicol
I0P9XEZ9WV
Butyl 2-hydroxyethyl ether
Ether monobutylique de l'ethyleneglycol
9004-77-7
CHEBI:63921
MFCD00002884
DSSTox_CID_4097
DSSTox_RID_77286
DSSTox_GSID_24097
Butylcelosolv [Czech]
Caswell No. 121
butylcellosolve
2-Butoxyethanol, 99%, extra pure
g lycol ether eb
beta-Butoxyethanol
2 -Butoxyethanol
Butylglycol [French,German]
2-Butoxy-aethanol [German]
CAS-111-76-2
SMR001253761
2-Butossi-etanolo [Italian]
Butoxyethanol, 2-
Ektasolve EB solvent
CCRIS 5985
HSDB 538
Butoksyetylowy alkohol [Polish]
Ek tasolve EB solvent
Glycol ether eb acetate
EINECS 203-905-0
UN2369
n-butoxyethanol sodium salt
EPA Pesticide Chemical Code 011501
BRN 1732511
Butyloxitol
AI3-0993
butoxy-ethanol
Polyethylene glycol butyl ether
AI3-09903
Eter monobutilico del etilenglicol [Spanish]
Ethylene glycol mono butyl ether
Butyl Glycolether
EB Solvent
Ether monobutylique de l'ethyleneglycol [French]
3-oxaheptan-1-ol
Polyethylene glycol, monobutyl ester
2-(n-Butoxy)ethanol
BuOCH2CH2OH
ACMC-1BYYD
ethylenglycolmonobutylether
2-(1-Butyloxy) ethanol
EC 203-905-0
EC 500-012-0
2-Butoxy-aethanol(GERMAN)
Butyglycol(FRENCH, GERMAN)
Ethylene glycol monobutyl ether (EGBE)(2-Butoxyet)
ethylene glycol-monobutyl ether
Polyoxyethylene monobutyl ether
Poly(oxy-1,2-ethanediyl), alpha-butyl-omega-hydroxy-
2-BUTOXY ETHANOL (ETHYLENE GLYCOL MONOBUTYL ETHER)
Ethylene glycol butyl ether, 99%
2-butoxyethanol (butyl cellosolve)
Ethylene glycol butyl ether, >=99%
Ethylene Glycol Monobutyl Ether Reagent Grade
Ethylene glycol butyl ether, analytical standard
Q421557
Ethylene glycol butyl ether, for synthesis, 99.0%
J-508565
Ethylene glycol butyl ether, SAJ first grade, >=99.0%
Z1259086991
Ethylene glycol butyl ether, spectrophotometric grade, >=99.0%
Ethylene glycol monobutyl ether [UN2369] [Keep away from food]


 

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