Guest guest Posted April 9, 2001 Report Share Posted April 9, 2001 I'll try to answer a few issues in the one posting :- For a start, let me preface my reply with a little personal background info : 1. I'm an industrial chemist with 22 years formulation experience. 2. I've worked in : Pesticides - 3yrs (Roche / Rhone Poullenc) Oil industry - 13 yrs (Mobil Oil) Hazardous wastes - 3yrs (Nationwide) Specialty chemicals mfg - 3 yrs (My own company) 3. I am necessarily biased to the view that, regardless of source, if the chemistry and effect is the same there is no difference between " natural " and " synthetic " . It's a question of preference - not of " facts " . Now then, to paraffin - " High quality " (ie cosmetic grade) paraffins are produced in a refinery by taking a crude paraffin (derived as a by-product of the lube oil production process) an " severly hydrotreating " the crude wax. Hydrotreating is the oil industry term for removing aromatic and unsaturated compounds by reacting them with hydrogen (high pressure, moderate temperature & specialised catalysts) to effectively remove ALL the reactive species. As an example of another product that is produced by the same method consider " white oil " (medical paraffin) - same process / shorter carbon chain length. Liquids have " short " carbon chains (say 20 - 30 carbons), waxes have " long " carbon chains (say 40+). These compounds are, therefor, " virtually chemically inert " . A quick check is to test their reactivity to conc. sulphuric acid (the " sulphonatable residue test " ). High quality paraffin and white oils are virtually 100% " unsulphonatable " - ie they rate as having no sulphonatable residue. A " typical " lube oil might run at 80% unsulphonatable. So 20% is still reactive. Petrol would run at about 20% unsulphonatable (80% reactive). (BTW " Turkey Red Oil " is a sulphonated castor oil derivative - so " natural " doesn't equal " inert " .) Hydrotreating adds hydrogen. Hydrogen and carbon, coupled to the oxygen in the air, burn to give CO2 and water. Compounds with a higher hydrogen to carbon ratio (eg paraffins) burn more cleanly than compounds with lower hydrogen to carbon ratios (eg aromatics). SO, ... a PURE paraffin candle will burn very cleanly AND with a very high energy (eg heat & light) yield - BUT they will tend to burn quickly because the " melt point " of the wax is very clearly defined and the wick can draw the clean , molten wax easily. Impure candles (those that contain a lot of oil or that use a low quality wax - so called " slack " wax) burn with a smoky flame and sickly odour. In terms of beeswax burning " cleaner and longer " - most natural products have what could best be called " inherent purity " - not some new age khamic process - but a byproduct of the fact that natural systems tend to be highly selective about the way chemistry works in a biological sense. In other words, biological systems run certain chemical pathways that select for specific chemical outcomes. Now whether or not this produces a wax that burns " cleaner and longer " is a matter for testing - it certainly wouldn't be the bee's primary aim - and you would want to test vs both high and low grade paraffins ( as well as stearine and a variety of blends) before formulating a conclusion. Note that many (dare I say MOST) perfumes have a high aromatic (ie benzene ring) content (hence the name " aromatic " chemistry) and incomplete combustion (as in a low temp candle flame) will indeed produce a number of odd chemicals that could conceivably lead to headaches, etc. A don't start with the " Oh yes, but their natural " bit .... so is bufotoxin and rattlesnake venom - pure and natural and deadly - nature is just a source - not an outcome. And so to a post from >Tamara Zyganiuk >www.spellboundbotanicals.com In terms of things like cetyl alcohol, yes, you can " derive " it from nature and cocobetain can start with a natural product - but by the time it's been through the wringer at Stepan or Henkel or A & W or P & G to produce the final, complexed and refined product you might as well say that it's a petroleum product - the reality is that, weight for weight, there is probably as much petro derived stock as natural stock in the molecule. The phenoxyethanol argument is one I hadn't heard before - I guess you could derive the compound from sage oil or similar - but it seems like a long and involved process. Also, if you want to clean it up to a cosmetic grade spec. I expect they will have to distill and extract it - wonder what they use as the extractant? Pentane or Heptane maybe (the same PETROLEUM product used to extract most lavender E.O. - sorry, couldn't help myself ). I guess they could go supercritical CO2 - but then the PhenEth would be worth the same as chamomille oil - about A$900 / kg! Seems a waste of time and money (and resources) given that the synthetic route produces the same product for about 1% of that! I., like you, dislike people making a claim that they either cannot substantiate or where they are intentionally deluding third parties who have no real skill set from which to evaluate the claim. Natural derived is, IMHO, a sales gimick - as most lay people cannot evaluate the synthetic pathway to create the product the " starts with nature and therefor is natural " claim is just BS to con the chemically uneducated. regards, BAH Re: Beeswax > yes, that is what I had read as well. another list member had > information that found the paraffin to be " virtually chemically inert " . > I was asking this member for more information on that because if it > is true....I would like to use paraffin for certain things. > of course beeswax will be more fragrant and cleaner burning. I am not > certain it is longer burning. I have seen many candles outlast beeswax > if they are made from a " high-quality " wax. There are also vegetable > waxes now that are used for candle-making. It's all very interesting, > but I am aware of what you mentioned. > Thanks anyway! > > > R & T Shields wrote: > > > > Well just because something is easily accessiblw does not mean that it is > > *safe*...look at pesticides for example...Here's a quote I found this > > morning and an url too... " Naturally fragrant beeswax burns cleaner and > > longer than petroleum-based waxes. There's no smoking since there is no > > petroleum burning in the candles " > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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