WAX


Wax candle

'Wax' has traditionally referred to a substance that is secreted by bees (beeswax) and used by them in constructing their honeycombs.
It is an imprecisely defined term generally understood to be a substance with properties similar to beeswax, namely

plastic (malleable) at normal ambient temperatures

★ a melting point above approximately 45 °C (113 °F) (which differentiates waxes from fats and oils)

★ a relatively low viscosity when melted (unlike many plastics)

insoluble in water

hydrophobic
'Waxes' may be natural or artificial. In addition to beeswax, carnauba (a plant epicuticular wax) and paraffin (a petroleum wax) are commonly encountered waxes which occur naturally. ''Earwax'' is an oily substance found in the human ear. Some artificial materials that exhibit similar properties are also described as wax or waxy.
Commercial honeycomb foundation, made by pressing beeswax between patterned metal rollers.

Chemically, a wax may be an ester of ethylene glycol (ethan-1,2-diol) and two fatty acids, as opposed to a fat which is an ester of glycerin (propan-1,2,3-triol) and three fatty acids. It may also be a combination of other fatty alcohols with fatty acids. It is a type of lipid.

Contents
Wax types
Animal and insect waxes
Vegetable waxes
Mineral waxes
Petroleum waxes
Synthetic waxes
External links

Wax types


Animal and insect waxes


Beeswax - produced by honey bees

Chinese wax - produced by scale insects ''Coccus ceriferus''

Shellac wax - from the lac insect ''Coccus lacca''

Spermaceti - from the head cavities and blubber of the sperm whale

Lanolin (wool wax) - from the sebaceous glands of sheep
Vegetable waxes


Bayberry wax - from the surface of the berries of the bayberry shrub, ''Myrica faya''

Candelilla wax - from the Mexican shrubs ''Euphorbia cerifera'' and ''E. antisyphilitica''

Carnauba wax - from the leaves of the Carnauba palm, ''Copernica cerifera''

Castor wax - catalytically hydrogenated castor oil

Esparto wax - a byproduct of making paper from esparto grass, (''Macrochloa tenacissima'')

Japan wax - a vegetable triglyceride (not a true wax), from the berries of ''Rhus'' and ''Toxicodendron'' species

Jojoba oil - a replacement for spermaceti, jojoba is pressed from the seeds of the jojoba bush, ''Simmondsia chinensis''

Ouricury wax - from the Brazilian Feather palm, ''Syagrus coronata''.

Rice bran wax - obtained from rice bran (''Oryza sativa'')
Mineral waxes


Ceresin waxes

Montan wax - extracted from lignite and brown coal

Ozocerite - found in lignite beds

Peat waxes
Petroleum waxes


Paraffin wax - made of long-chain alkane hydrocarbons

Microcrystalline wax - with very fine crystalline structure
Synthetic waxes


Polyethylene waxes - based on polyethylene

Fischer-Tropsch waxes

Chemically modified waxes - usually esterified or saponified

substituted amide waxes

polymerized α-olefins

External links



Waxes

www.igiwax.com, resource for wax product research

www.microcrystallinewax.net, resource for microcrystalline wax research

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