monolithic
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Solvent storage - metal bottles
I'm looking for 150-250 ml metal storage containers with a tightly threaded lid, capable of holding relatively low boiling point solvents like DCM,
acetone, nitromethane, etc. Anyone know of where I could buy a half dozen or so of these without paying an arm and a leg? I looked at United States
Plastic Corp website and they want $10-15 per container for something like this: https://www.usplastic.com/catalog/item.aspx?itemid=91733&... They do have "rubber cement" style metal cans for cheap but I'm not sure if the
threading is good enough to prevent something like DCM from evaporating away.
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fx-991ex
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Why not brown glass bottle? i got a pack of 12*500ml for something like 20$ on amazon or vivaplex.com
I use teflon/PTFE sheet to make gasket for sealing the cap as it resist almost every chemical.
Plastic are pretty strong nowadays, i dont see problem with plastic threaded cap.
The galon of acetone i bought at the store years ago came in a plastic bottle.
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monolithic
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Quote: Originally posted by fx-991ex | Why not brown glass bottle? i got a pack of 12*500ml for something like 20$ on amazon or vivaplex.com
I use teflon/PTFE sheet to make gasket for sealing the cap as it resist almost every chemical.
Plastic are pretty strong nowadays, i dont see problem with plastic threaded cap.
The galon of acetone i bought at the store years ago came in a plastic bottle. |
I'm using glass now. I'll be moving shortly, and will have to store my solvents outside. I'm a bit paranoid about breaking glass bottles during the
move or summertime temperatures exploding the bottles.
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Sulaiman
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The thread is almost irrelevant,
Its the cap seal that is critical.
CAUTION : Hobby Chemist, not Professional or even Amateur
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Texium
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A few years ago I transported all of my chemicals, along with the rest of my belongings, over 1000 miles in the midst of a scorching hot summer. Not a
single thing broke. I packed all the glass bottles between plastic bottles, or bubble wrapped them if necessary. Things I was particularly concerned
about I packed extra carefully and kept inside the car with me to protect them from the brunt of the heat, and I kept the most sensitive things in a
cooler with ice. I don’t think you need to worry.
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BromicAcid
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Diethyl ether is the main solvent that I routinely see in metal bottles. They work well if you can find them. As for packing, I also packed up had
moved my lab once, I did it by putting the items into totes and pouring vermiculite around all the items, nothing moved, nothing broke.
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Tsjerk
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I moved my chemicals and glass a couple of times, and I used a lot of newspaper. Nothing broke, I just made sure I was the one who moved the boxes
containing the items and not helping friends or hired movers to make sure the boxes were handled with care.
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charley1957
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I have seen aluminum beer bottles lately. They likely have an internal plastic coating, and they have stout threads and a good seal.
You can’t claim you drank all day if you didn’t start early in the morning.
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dettoo456
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@monolithic This place (https://airseacontainers.com/packaging/packaging-bottles-can...) seems to have them for reasonable prices but I’ve never bought from them before
so I can’t vouch for their quality or anything else about them.
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Dr.Bob
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I have some 120 ml qorpak glass bottles, amber (used once for solvent, some have label residue on them) and clear (new) for $2, with PTFE lined green
caps, and if you really want security, I have new, plastic coated bottles for $3 each. These are used by many companies for harsh chemicals and
solvents, I have received TFA, bromine methyl iodide, and chloroform in them. They are much better than metal for most chemicals.
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