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| | Tetraphenyltin Basic information |
| | Tetraphenyltin Chemical Properties |
| Melting point | 224-227 °C(lit.) | | Boiling point | 420 °C | | density | 1,49 g/cm3 | | vapor density | 14.7 (vs air) | | Fp | 231 °F | | solubility | insoluble in Ether | | form | Powder | | color | white | | Specific Gravity | 1.49 | | Water Solubility | INSOLUBLE | | Hydrolytic Sensitivity | 1: no significant reaction with aqueous systems | | BRN | 3145842 | | Exposure limits | ACGIH: TWA 0.1 mg/m3; STEL 0.2 mg/m3 (Skin) NIOSH: IDLH 25 mg/m3; TWA 0.1 mg/m3 | | Stability: | Stable. Incompatible with strong acids, strong oxidizing agents. | | InChIKey | CRHIAMBJMSSNNM-UHFFFAOYSA-N | | CAS DataBase Reference | 595-90-4(CAS DataBase Reference) | | NIST Chemistry Reference | Stannane, tetraphenyl-(595-90-4) | | EPA Substance Registry System | Stannane, tetraphenyl- (595-90-4) |
| | Tetraphenyltin Usage And Synthesis |
| Chemical Properties | White powder. Insoluble in water; soluble in hot
benzene, toluene, xylene. | | Uses | Stabilizer in chlorinated transformer oils, mothproofing
agent, scavenger in dielectric fluids, intermediate. | | Uses | Tetraphenyltin is used as stabilizer, catalyze, adhesion agent, it is used to produce other chemicals like, it can react with 3-chloro-2,5-diisobutyl-pyrazine to get 3,6-diisobutyl-2-phenylpyrazine. It is used as starting materials or catalysts. | | Hazard | Skin irritant. | | Purification Methods | It forms yellow crystals from CHCl3, pet ether (b 77-120o), xylene or *benzene/cyclohexane, and is dried at 75o/20mm. [Gilman & Rosenberg J Am Chem Soc 74 531 1952, Beilstein 16 IV 1592.] |
| | Tetraphenyltin Preparation Products And Raw materials |
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