high purity Dibutyl sebacate (DBS)-BIOLAR

  • high purity Dibutyl sebacate (DBS)-BIOLAR
  • high purity Dibutyl sebacate (DBS)-BIOLAR
  • high purity Dibutyl sebacate (DBS)-BIOLAR
  • What is Dibutyl sebacate (DBS)?
  • Visit Product Comparison Guide Dibutyl sebacate (DBS) is a lipophilic dibutyl ester that can be used as a plasticizer with low solubility in water. DBS can be used as a plasticizer for the formation of ethylcellulose based coating membranes which can be potentially used in drug delivery systems.
  • What is Dibutyl sebacate (DBS) NF buffer?
  • Dibutyl Sebacate (DBS) NF Buffers are utilized as a pH-adjusting agent or as a reactant, catalyst, or processing aid in the production of a variety of medications. Our high-purity hydroxide pellets are an ideal solution where pH adjustment or caustic properties are required, yet impurities matter.
  • How does Dibutyl sebacate affect the environment?
  • Dibutyl sebacate's production and use as a plasticizer, rubber softener, flavoring agent and cosmetic and perfume ingredient (1) may result in its release to the environment through various waste streams (SRC). (1) Lewis RJ; Hawley's Condensed Chemical Dictionary. 13th ed. NY, NY: Van Nostrand Reinhold Co pp. 359 (1997)
  • What is Dibutyl sebacate used for?
  • Visit Product Comparison Guide Dibutyl sebacate has been used as a plasticizer to prepare free ethylcellulose films. It can be utilized as a core in liquid-core capsules with cross-linked alginate/polyacrylamide membrane prepared via co-extrusion jet-break-up method for the extraction of the pesticide, atrazine.
  • How is Dibutyl sebacate degraded?
  • Vapor-phase dibutyl sebacate will be degraded in the atmosphere by reaction with photochemically-produced hydroxyl radicals; the half-life for this reaction in air is estimated to be 21 hours. Particulate-phase dibutyl sebacate will be removed from the atmosphere by wet and dry deposition.
  • Does Dibutyl sebacate have low mobility?
  • If released to soil, dibutyl sebacate is expected to have low mobility based upon an estimated Koc of 575. Volatilization from moist soil surfaces is not expected to be an important fate process based upon an estimated Henry's Law constant of 4.8X10-8 atm-cu m/mole.

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