Coconut diethanolamide
Coconut diethanolamide Basic information
- Product Name:
- Coconut diethanolamide
- Synonyms:
-
- amides,coco,n,n-bis(2-hydroxyethyl)
- Amides,coco,N,N-bis(hydroxyethyl)
- clindrol200cgn
- clindrol202cgn
- clindrolsuperamide100cg
- Coconutacid,diethanolamide
- COCAMIDE DIETHANOLAMINE
- N,N-Bis(hydroxyethyl)coco amides
- CAS:
- 68603-42-9
- MF:
- no
- MW:
- 0
- EINECS:
- 271-657-0
- Product Categories:
-
- Hair Care
- Home Care
- Skin Care
- 6501
- 68603-42-9
- Mol File:
- Mol File
Coconut diethanolamide Chemical Properties
- Boiling point:
- 168-274°C
- Odor
- at 100.00?%. mild ammonia
- Water Solubility
- 5-10 g/100 mL at 18 ºC
- Stability:
- Stable. Combustible. Incompatible with strong oxidizing agents.
- IARC
- 2B (Vol. 101) 2013
- EPA Substance Registry System
- Cocamides diethanolamines (68603-42-9)
Safety Information
- Hazardous Substances Data
- 68603-42-9(Hazardous Substances Data)
MSDS
- Language:English Provider:Coconut diethanolamide
Coconut diethanolamide Usage And Synthesis
Description
Cocamide DEA is also named N,N-bis(2-hydroxyethyl) coco fatty acid diethanolamide, coconut fatty acid diethanolamide, cocoyl diethanolamide, and coconut oil acid diethanolamide. It is manufactured from coconut oil and is widely used in industry and at horne as a surface-active agent. It is contained in hand gels, handwashing soaps, shampoos and dish-washing liquids for its foam-producing and stabilizing properties, and in metalworking fluids and polishing agents as an anticorrosion inhibitor.
Chemical Properties
viscous yellow to amber liquid
Uses
cocamide DEA is a thickener and viscosity builder for cosmetic surfactant systems. It is added to lauryl sulfate-based liquid cleansers to help stabilize the lather and improve foam formation.
Uses
Coconut diethanolamide is a mixture of ethanolamides of coconut acid. It is a component in bath, shower and body cosmetics and in cooling fluids; emulsifying agent; emulsion stabilizer; surfactant- and viscosity-controlling agent.
Application
Coconut diethanolamide has the properties of wetting, washing, emulsifying, softening, etc. It has good foam stabilising effect on anionic surfactants. It is an indispensable raw material for a variety of cosmetic products such as liquid detergents, liquid soaps, shampoos, cleansers and cleansers. When used with soap, it is resistant to hard water.
It can also be used as an emulsifying stabiliser for cream products, and is widely used in shoe polish, printing inks, drawing supplies and so on.
It is used in the textile printing and dyeing industry as a detergent for fabrics, as well as other detergent ingredients and thickeners.
It is one of the components of spinning oil for synthetic fibres such as polypropylene. It has a good thickening effect on liquid products using anionic surfactants as the main raw material.
It has a certain antistatic conditioning effect and is less irritating to the skin.
It is widely used as an emulsifier for oily raw materials in various cosmetics and surfactant products. It is commonly used in cosmetic formulations for bath oils, shampoos, conditioners, lipsticks and hair dyes. It is also a surfactant in soap bars, light detergents and dishwashing detergents, and a degreasing agent for cottonseed.
General Description
Viscous amber or yellow liquid. pH (1% aqueous solution) 9.
Air & Water Reactions
Water soluble. Foams in water.
Reactivity Profile
Coconut diethanolamide is a mixture of amines. Amines are chemical bases. They neutralize acids to form salts plus water. These acid-base reactions are exothermic. The amount of heat that is evolved per mole of amine in a neutralization is largely independent of the strength of the amine as a base. Amines may be incompatible with isocyanates, halogenated organics, peroxides, phenols (acidic), epoxides, anhydrides, and acid halides. Flammable gaseous hydrogen is generated by amines in combination with strong reducing agents, such as hydrides.
Hazard
A poison by ingestion. A moderate skin irritant.
Fire Hazard
Coconut diethanolamide is probably combustible.
Contact allergens
Cocamide DEA, manufactured from coconut oil, is widely used in industry and at home as a surface-active agent. It is contained in hand gels, hand washing soaps, shampoos, and dish-washing liquids for its foam-producing and stabilizing properties, and in metal working fluids and polishing agents as an anticorrosion inhibitor.
Safety Profile
A poison by ingestion. A moderate skin irritant. Questionable carcinogen with experimental Carcinogenic data reported. When heated to decomposition it emits acrid smoke and irritating vapors.
Synthesis
Coconut diethanolamide is produced by the condensation reaction of an appropriate fatty acid (methyl cocoate, coconut oil, whole coconut acid, or stripped coconut fatty acids) with diethanolamine in 1:1 or 1:2 molar ratios using temperatures up to 170°C and in the presence of an alkaline catalyst. The 1:2 mixtures of fatty acids (or methyl fatty acids) with diethanolamine result in low quality diethanolamides with residual ethylene glycol and free diethanolamine. 1:1 mixtures produce higher quality diethanolamides with much less free amine, and are therefore used in lower concentrations than the 1:2 diethanolamides.
Coconut diethanolamide Supplier
- Tel
- 18008658728
- 2718637152@qq.com
- Tel
- 0757-86329057 18934348241
- sales4.gd@hwrkchemical.com
- Tel
- 4009903999 13355009207
- 3007715519@qq.com
- Tel
- 400-1166-196 18981987031
- cdhxsj@163.com
- Tel
- 021-021-021-67601398-809-809-809 15221380277
- marketing_china@spectrumchemical.com
Coconut diethanolamide (68603-42-9)Related Product Information
- Diethanolamine
- 1-Dodecanol
- (7-Fluoroheptyl)isopropylmalonic acid dimethyl ester
- 2-(METHYLSULFONYL)ETHANOL
- CAO-30
- 1-Hydroxyethylidene-1,1-diphosphonic acid
- Cocamidopropyl betaine
- N,N-Diethylhydroxylamine
- Coconut oil
- Oleamide
- ODEA
- N,N'-ETHYLENEBISOLEAMIDE
- Cocodimethylamine
- Octadecanamide
- Sodium lauryl polyoxyethylene ether sulfate
- Diglycolamide laurate
- Cocoanut oil glycolamide
- SALCOMINE