| | |||||||
| Register | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| Chemistry Forum Chemistry Forum. Discuss chemical reactions, chemistry. |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
| |||
| |||
| Rick Novaraxxxx ([Only registered users see links. ]) wrote: : I am looking for something I can put into some chemicals very similar to : Automotive enamel reducer, so I can tell the chemicals apart by smell. : They would have to be inexpensive and basically inert. Try 1,6-diamonohexane. You can get it through Aldrich. You can easily distinguish it from benzaldehyde, also available through Aldrich. -- -- William "Dave" Thweatt Robert E. Welsh Postdoctoral Fellow Chemistry Department Rice University Houston, TX [Only registered users see links. ] [Only registered users see links. ] |
| Tags |
| smell |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
| | ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Why do ripe fruits - especially when canned - smell bad? | Radium | Botany Forum | 46 | 11-30-2010 05:43 PM |
| Politics And Cannibalism? Introducing The Dourties, Chelsea, Bill, Hillary, Barrack Obama, George Bush, Jr., And All Of Capital Hill! | jon_johnfrancisayres@yahoo.com | Microbiology Forum | 0 | 10-06-2007 05:59 AM |
| Why do ripe fruits -- especially when canned -- smell bad? -- excluding apples and cantaloupes | Radium | Botany Forum | 32 | 08-02-2007 03:27 PM |
| Fruit-flavored air-fresheners smell good. Ripe *actual* fruits smell bad. | Radium | Botany Forum | 9 | 07-30-2007 07:36 AM |