- Tetrachloroethylene, also
known as
perchloroethylene or
under the
systematic name tetrachloroethene, and
abbreviations such as perc (or PERC), and PCE...
- (usually non-polar, as
opposed to
water which is a
polar solvent).
Perchloroethylene (known in the
industry as "perc") is the most
commonly used solvent...
-
organic compounds such as
trichloroethylene and
tetrachloroethylene (
perchloroethylene). It was
developed in the 1890s by
Henry John
Horstman Fenton as an...
- The
liquid also acts to lift
other forms of
defects from the film.
Perchloroethylene, a
hazardous substance with
multiple health and
safety risks, is commonly...
- Protocol. It was also used as a dry
cleaning solvent as a
substitute for
perchloroethylene for a
short time in the
United States. 1-Bromopropane is
highly neurotoxic...
-
other than water. The
solvent used is
typically tetrachloroethylene (
perchloroethylene),
which the
industry calls "perc". It is used to
clean delicate fabrics...
-
methylene chloride, chloroform,
vinylidene chloride, trichloroethylene,
perchloroethylene,
allyl chloride, epichlorohydrin, chlorobenzene, dichlorobenzenes...
- the most
common of
which is
tetrachloroethylene (commonly
called perchloroethylene or "perc").
Proponents of wet
cleaning state that
these methods can...
-
commercially from
ethylene carbonate.
Photochlorination gives the
perchloroethylene carbonate C2Cl4O2CO and
hydrogen chloride HCl,
which is subsequently...
-
Names IUPAC name 4,4,5,5-tetrachloro-1,3-dioxolan-2-one
Other names Perchloroethylene carbonate, tetrachloro-1,3-dioxolan-2-one
Identifiers CAS
Number 22432-68-4 Y...