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Name: Samin
Status: student
Age: 16
Location: N/A
Country: N/A
Date: 2000


Question:
I am doing a chemistry project, and i need to know what effect acetone has on ink, and the removal of ink on a wooden surface. What happens, chemically, when acetone and ink combine, and what is in acetone, or what characteristic of acetone makes it useful to remove almost anything from a smooth surface, such as wood. Thank you for your time.


Replies:
Acetone is one of the better solvents in the chemist's arsenal. It is polar, soluble in water in all proportions, and soluble in many organic solvents as well. As a result it is a good solvent for the organic polymers used in paints and inks. The polymer is the large molecule that ties the ink or paint together in a coherent film. Dissolve the polymeric "glue" holding the coating together and the other things just wash away.

It will dissolve most inks, and dissolve or at least soften most paints -- depending on the type. To illustrate its power dip a piece of polystyrene foam cup into a glass beaker and observe what happens. Don't pour acetone into the polystyrene foam cup or you'll have a mess.

Caution: Acetone is volatile and very, almost explosively flammable. Use only in good ventilation and keep away from flames or other sources of ignition, even static electricity has been known it ignite acetone vapor.

Vince Calder



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