ssorllih wrote:Dow-therm has a flame retardant in it. I use light mineral oil in my glass candles.
We manufactured Therminol at Monsanto. ...no flame retardant added. DowTherm is the same way. I've used quite a bit in polymer processes over the years, especially at Celanese. (Yes, I've seen some fires in my time...! Mostly, though, it smokes.)
Here's an MSDS for the USP variety
http://www.online-msds.com/msds_warehou ... ?ID=147807
which quotes a closed-cup flash point of 379 deg F (so yeah, you could probably burn it in a "coal oil" lamp, but you'd be better off with a lighter grade), and a boiling range of 572 to 842 deg F.
It's a mixture, so you have a boiling range. The "IBP" of 572 is the important number, initial boiling point. The liquid system that we ran was a closed system, slightly pressurized, so we had our over-temp alarm set at 600 and trip at 620. The stuff was used for heat transfer fluid in all our bench scale lab equipment, too. Great stuff- - remains a liquid over a very wide range of temperatures.
There are quite a few varieties of mineral oil, so use the USP (food grade) variety found in drug stores to coat your equipment, not the oil lamp variety. ...especially if constipated!
