Harman Patil (Editor)

Icosane

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Related alkanes
  
Nonadecane Tetracosane

Boiling point
  
342.7 °C

Appearance
  
Colorless, waxy crystals

Formula
  
C20H42

Molar mass
  
282.5475 g/mol

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Icosane (alternative spelling eicosane) is an alkane with the chemical formula C20H42. It has 366,319 constitutional isomers.

Icosane has little use in the petrochemical industry, as its high flash point makes it an inefficient fuel. n-Icosane (the straight-chain structural isomer of icosane) is the shortest compound found in paraffin waxes used to form candles.

Icosane Icosane Wikipedia

Icosane's size, state or chemical inactivity does not exclude it from the traits its smaller alkane counterparts have. It is a colorless, non-polar molecule, nearly unreactive except when it burns. It is less dense than and insoluble in water. Its non-polar trait means it can only perform weak intermolecular bonding (hydrophobic/van der Waals forces).

Icosane FileIcosane3Dballspng Wikimedia Commons

Icosane's phase transition at a moderate temperature makes it a candidate phase change material, or PCM which can be used to store thermal energy and control temperature.

Icosane How to Pronounce Icosane YouTube

Naming

IUPAC currently recommends icosane, whereas Chemical Abstracts Service and Beilstein use eicosane.

Icosane

References

Icosane Wikipedia