Eicosane

Eicosane
General
Molecular formula C20H42
CAS number 112-95-8
EC number 204-018-1
Physical characteristics
Appearance Colourless crystals or wax-like solid
Melting point 36.7° Celsius
Boiling point 342.7° Celsius
Vapour density -
Vapour pressure -
Specific gravity -
Flash point -
Explosion limits -
Autoignition temperature -

Eicosane (also known as icosane or didecyl) is an alkane hydrocarbon with the chemical formula CH3(CH2)18CH3.

Eicosane has little use in the petrochemical industry, as its high flash point makes it an inefficient fuel. Due to its chemical inactivity, n-eicosane (a fully straight-chain structural isomer of eicosane) is part of the paraffin group, and is the shortest molecule in the compounds used to form candles.

Eicosane's size, state or chemical inactivity does not exclude it from the traits its smaller alkane counterparts have. It is colourless, less dense than water, a non-polar molecule, nearly non-reactive with any other atom or molecule unless combusted, and insoluble. Its non-polar trait means it can only perform weak hydrogen intermolecular bonding (Hydrophobic/Van der Waal's forces)

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Alkanes

methane
CH4

|
 

ethane
C2H6

|
 

propane
C3H8

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butane
C4H10

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pentane
C5H12

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hexane
C6H14

heptane
C7H16

|
 

octane
C8H18

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nonane
C9H20

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decane
C10H22

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undecane
C11H24

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dodecane
C12H26

 

tridecane
C13H28

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tetradecane
C14H30

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pentadecane
C15H32

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hexadecane
C16H34

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heptadecane
C17H36

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octadecane
C18H38

 

nonadecane
C19H40

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eicosane
C20H42

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heneicosane
C21H44

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docosane
C22H46

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tricosane
C23H48

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tetracosane
C24H50

 

pentacosane
C25H52

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hexacosane
C26H54

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heptacosane
C27H56

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octacosane
C28H58

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nonacosane
C29H60

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triacontane
C30H62

 

hentriacontane
C31H64

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dotriacontane
C32H66

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tritriacontane
C33H68

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tetratriacontane
C34H70

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pentatriacontane
C35H72

|
 

hexatriacontane
C36H74

 

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See also: Eicosane, Alkane, Butane, CAS number, Celsius, Chemical compound, Chemical formula, Compounds