Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Oxidation of waxes using microwave-generated singlet molecular oxygen

Waxes are a widely used chemical commodity throughout the world due to certain intrinsic properties. Applications vary widely, including such obvious ones as candles and polishes, less obviously coatings, ink, and cosmetics, and more obscurely, hot melt adhesives, textile processing and chewing gum....

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Beigley, John Robertson
Other Authors: Hutton, Alan T
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Chemistry 2016
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613622944923648
access_status_str Open Access
author Beigley, John Robertson
author2 Hutton, Alan T
author_browse Beigley, John Robertson
Hutton, Alan T
author_facet Hutton, Alan T
Beigley, John Robertson
author_sort Beigley, John Robertson
collection Thesis
description Waxes are a widely used chemical commodity throughout the world due to certain intrinsic properties. Applications vary widely, including such obvious ones as candles and polishes, less obviously coatings, ink, and cosmetics, and more obscurely, hot melt adhesives, textile processing and chewing gum. The waxes used are obtained from a variety of sources, natural, mineral, and synthetic. The properties of the wax determine its suitability for a particular application. For certain of the latter, a wax containing Oxygen groups is often the most appropriate type. While there are a number of such waxes that occur naturally, there are also many more in which the raw wax has undergone oxidation by chemical processes. Generally, this is done utilising elevated temperatures, and passing air or oxygen through the wax. Oxidation then takes place via a free radical process. Singlet molecular oxygen is a higher-energy state species of oxygen, in which the two electrons in the π* 2p antibonding molecular orbitals, while remaining unpaired, are excited to antiparallel spin. Reactions of singlet oxygen are very site-specific, resulting in more specific products compared to the free radical process. It was considered that oxidation of waxes by reaction with singlet oxygen might produce different products compared to the thermal oxidation, and also compared to oxidation using ozone. An apparatus was set up to test this theory. The singlet oxygen was generated by passing a stream of oxygen through a microwave beam to form a plasma, the resulting singlet oxygen-containing gas being reacted with molten wax. Optimisation of the setup was performed before performing reactions, using several different waxes. The experiments were duplicated by ones with the microwave switched off, so that any results could be ascribed to the presence of singlet oxygen, and not normal oxygen. A similar apparatus was set up to react the same waxes with ozone, the latter being generated by passing oxygen through an electrical discharge-type generator. Blank runs with the electric discharge apparatus switched off, were also carried out to be able to distinguish any reaction due to the unozonised oxygen. The results showed that the singlet oxygen only reacted with a particular type of wax, namely oxidised polyethylene wax (AC6-29), although other effects were caused by the heat of the plasma. The ozone, on the other hand, reacted readily with all types of waxes tested. Other experiments were also conducted to investigate the use of microwave technology for chemical purposes, including development of an analytical method for saponification value determination in which microwaves replaced conventional heating.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/19577
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:39:05.173Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher Department of Chemistry
publisherStr Department of Chemistry
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/19577 Oxidation of waxes using microwave-generated singlet molecular oxygen Beigley, John Robertson Hutton, Alan T Chemistry Waxes are a widely used chemical commodity throughout the world due to certain intrinsic properties. Applications vary widely, including such obvious ones as candles and polishes, less obviously coatings, ink, and cosmetics, and more obscurely, hot melt adhesives, textile processing and chewing gum. The waxes used are obtained from a variety of sources, natural, mineral, and synthetic. The properties of the wax determine its suitability for a particular application. For certain of the latter, a wax containing Oxygen groups is often the most appropriate type. While there are a number of such waxes that occur naturally, there are also many more in which the raw wax has undergone oxidation by chemical processes. Generally, this is done utilising elevated temperatures, and passing air or oxygen through the wax. Oxidation then takes place via a free radical process. Singlet molecular oxygen is a higher-energy state species of oxygen, in which the two electrons in the π* 2p antibonding molecular orbitals, while remaining unpaired, are excited to antiparallel spin. Reactions of singlet oxygen are very site-specific, resulting in more specific products compared to the free radical process. It was considered that oxidation of waxes by reaction with singlet oxygen might produce different products compared to the thermal oxidation, and also compared to oxidation using ozone. An apparatus was set up to test this theory. The singlet oxygen was generated by passing a stream of oxygen through a microwave beam to form a plasma, the resulting singlet oxygen-containing gas being reacted with molten wax. Optimisation of the setup was performed before performing reactions, using several different waxes. The experiments were duplicated by ones with the microwave switched off, so that any results could be ascribed to the presence of singlet oxygen, and not normal oxygen. A similar apparatus was set up to react the same waxes with ozone, the latter being generated by passing oxygen through an electrical discharge-type generator. Blank runs with the electric discharge apparatus switched off, were also carried out to be able to distinguish any reaction due to the unozonised oxygen. The results showed that the singlet oxygen only reacted with a particular type of wax, namely oxidised polyethylene wax (AC6-29), although other effects were caused by the heat of the plasma. The ozone, on the other hand, reacted readily with all types of waxes tested. Other experiments were also conducted to investigate the use of microwave technology for chemical purposes, including development of an analytical method for saponification value determination in which microwaves replaced conventional heating. 2016-05-11T08:07:16Z 2016-05-11T08:07:16Z 1999 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/19577 eng application/pdf Department of Chemistry Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Chemistry
Beigley, John Robertson
Oxidation of waxes using microwave-generated singlet molecular oxygen
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Oxidation of waxes using microwave-generated singlet molecular oxygen
title_full Oxidation of waxes using microwave-generated singlet molecular oxygen
title_fullStr Oxidation of waxes using microwave-generated singlet molecular oxygen
title_full_unstemmed Oxidation of waxes using microwave-generated singlet molecular oxygen
title_short Oxidation of waxes using microwave-generated singlet molecular oxygen
title_sort oxidation of waxes using microwave generated singlet molecular oxygen
topic Chemistry
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/19577
work_keys_str_mv AT beigleyjohnrobertson oxidationofwaxesusingmicrowavegeneratedsingletmolecularoxygen