Sign In to View Organizational & Contract Pricing.
Select a Size
Change View
About This Item
Linear Formula:
C6H5CH2CH2CH3
CAS Number:
Molecular Weight:
120.19
UNSPSC Code:
12352100
NACRES:
NA.22
PubChem Substance ID:
EC Number:
203-132-9
Beilstein/REAXYS Number:
1903006
MDL number:
Assay:
≥99.0% (GC)
Form:
liquid
vapor density
4.14 (vs air)
Quality Level
vapor pressure
2 mmHg ( 20 °C)
assay
≥99.0% (GC)
form
liquid
autoignition temp.
842 °F
expl. lim.
6 %
refractive index
n20/D 1.491
bp
159 °C (lit.)
mp
−99 °C (lit.)
density
0.862 g/mL at 25 °C (lit.)
functional group
phenyl
SMILES string
CCCc1ccccc1
InChI
1S/C9H12/c1-2-6-9-7-4-3-5-8-9/h3-5,7-8H,2,6H2,1H3
InChI key
ODLMAHJVESYWTB-UHFFFAOYSA-N
Still not finding the right product?
Explore all of our products under Propylbenzene
signalword
Danger
hcodes
Hazard Classifications
Aquatic Chronic 2 - Asp. Tox. 1 - Flam. Liq. 3 - STOT SE 3
target_organs
Respiratory system
Storage Class
3 - Flammable liquids
wgk
WGK 2
flash_point_f
107.6 °F - closed cup
flash_point_c
42.0 °C - closed cup
ppe
Eyeshields, Faceshields, Gloves, type ABEK (EN14387) respirator filter
Choose from one of the most recent versions:
Already Own This Product?
Find documentation for the products that you have recently purchased in the Document Library.
Matthew Giardina et al.
Analytical chemistry, 75(7), 1604-1614 (2003-04-23)
With increasing interest in the detection of disease-related volatile organic compounds (VOCs) found in human breath, breath analysis could prove to be a very useful diagnostic tool, especially for the early detection of lung cancer. Solid-phase microextraction (SPME) is a
R Andrew Shalliker et al.
Journal of chromatography. A, 1216(5), 787-793 (2008-12-20)
The effect of solvent viscosity mismatch on elution performance in reversed-phase HPLC was studied using moment analysis. Two conditions were tested: (1) the mobile phase viscosity was less than the injection plug viscosity, and (2) the mobile phase viscosity was
Sara Eriksson et al.
Biodegradation, 16(3), 253-263 (2005-05-04)
The metabolism of monoaromatic hydrocarbons by an iron-reducing bacterial enrichment culture originating from diesel-contaminated groundwater was examined using d7-propylbenzene as a model hydrocarbon. Sequence analysis of the 16S rDNA gene showed that the dominant part (10 of 10 clones) of



