AROCLOR Monsanto Resins and Plasticizers for Chlorinated Rubber Yemen

  • AROCLOR Monsanto Resins and Plasticizers for Chlorinated Rubber Yemen
  • AROCLOR Monsanto Resins and Plasticizers for Chlorinated Rubber Yemen
  • AROCLOR Monsanto Resins and Plasticizers for Chlorinated Rubber Yemen
  • Is Aroclor 1254 a chlorinated rubber paint?
  • Aroclor-containing marine paints, including chlorinated rubber paints, are no longer commercially available. Therefore, an Aroclor 1254-containing chlorinated rubber‐based white marine paint was formulated for this study based upon a 1960s-era Monsanto Technical Bulletin (Monsanto ca. 1960) that specifies the components for the coating.
  • What PCBs does Monsanto make?
  • Monsanto manufactured a range of PCB products under the trade name “Aroclor,” among the most common being Aroclor 1242, Aroclor 1248, Aroclor 1254, Aroclor 1260, Aroclor 1262, and Aroclor 1268.
  • Does Monsanto sell Aroclor?
  • Monsanto’s Aroclor products accounted for nearly all of the US production. Foreign manufacturers sold similar products under trade names such as Kanechlor® (Japan), Clophen® (Germany), Phenoclor® and Pyralene® (France), Fenchlor® (Italy), Sovol (Russia), Chlorfen (Poland), and Delor® (the former Czechoslovakia).
  • Is Monsanto a polychlorinated polyphenyl?
  • As noted earlier, Monsanto’s trade name for its line of polychlorinated polyphenyl products was Aroclor®. Readers will please note that there is no “h” in Aroclor (the trademark designation is generally omitted throughout this article to be consistent with common usage).
  • Who makes Aroclor 1254 PCB?
  • The work described herein focuses on the PCB formulation known as Aroclor 1254, manufactured by the USA-based Monsanto Industrial Chemical Company (Monsanto).
  • Are Aroclor fluids industrial products?
  • Aroclor fluids and other trade-named products were industrial products. Although some applications were mandated by industrial codes, building codes, military specifications, and other requirements, most were subject to free-market rules: PCBs were sold and used where the perceived cost-benefit ratio outweighed that of competing chemicals.

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