Paraformaldehyde, Reagent Grade *

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C5932-2.5kg
C5932-500g
Sale price $121.00
Sale price $39.00
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Paraformaldehyde | PFA | Reagent Grade | White Crystalline Solid

    Paraformaldehyde (PFA) is the smallest polyoxymethylene, the polymerization product of formaldehyde with a typical degree of polymerization of 8–100 units.

    Paraformaldehyde Flake | Lab Grade Features:

    CAS Number 30525-89-4
    Molecular Formula (CH2O)n
    Formula Weight (30.03)n
    Formaldehyde Content Min. 90%
    Acidity (as HCOOH) 0.03%
    Ash 0.01%
    Iron (Fe) 0.0002%
    Water 9.0%



    Paraformaldehyde Flake lab Shipping Information:
    DOT: Paraformaldehyde, 4.1, UN2213, PG III

    Paraformaldehyde is the condensation product of methylene glycol, a substance not so far isolated in its pure form; it is a white solid with a formaldehyde content between 78 and 98% and is supplied either as a Prill or Granular. All forms contain more than 95.5% paraformaldehyde content.

    Information On Paraformaldehyde From Wikipedia

    Synthesis 

    Paraformaldehyde forms slowly in aqueous formaldehyde solutions as a white precipitate, especially if stored in the cold. Formalin actually contains very little monomeric formaldehyde; most of it forms short chains of polyformaldehyde. A small amount of methanol is often added as a stabilizer to limit the extent of polymerization.

    Reactions 

    Paraformaldehyde can be depolymerized to formaldehyde gas by dry heating[1] and to formaldehyde solution by water in the presence of a base or heat. The high purity formaldehyde solutions obtained in this way are used as a fixative for microscopy and histology. The resulting formaldehyde gas from dry heating paraformaldehyde is flammable.

    Uses

    Once paraformaldehyde is depolymerized, the resulting formaldehyde may be used as a fumigant, disinfectant, fungicide, and fixative. Longer chain-length (high molecular weight) polyoxymethylenes are used as a thermoplastic and are known as polyoxymethylene plastic (POM, Delrin). It was used in the past in the discredited Sargenti method of root canal treatment.

    Paraformaldehyde is not a fixative; it must be depolymerized to formaldehyde in solution. In cell culture, a typical formaldehyde fixing procedure would involve using a 4% formaldehyde solution in phosphate buffered saline (PBS) on ice for 10 minutes. In histology and pathology specimens preparation, usually, the fixation step is performed using 10% Neutral Buffered Formalin (4% formaldehyde) for, at least, 24 hours.

    Paraformaldehyde is also used to crosslink proteins to DNA, as used in ChIP (chromatin immunoprecipitation) which is a technique to determine which part of DNA certain proteins are binding to.

    Paraformaldehyde can be used as a substitute of aqueous formaldehyde to produce the resinous binding material, which is commonly used together with melamine, phenol or other reactive agents in the manufacturing of particle board, medium density fiberboard and plywood.

    Toxicity

    As a formaldehyde releasing agent, paraformaldehyde is a potential carcinogen. Its acute oral median lethal dose in rats is 592 mg/kg.

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    Questions & Answers

    • Do you sale Formaldehyde 100% (pure) ?

      We do not carry 100% Formaldehyde. 
      The product paraformaldehyde is >90% pure with <10% Water. 
      Thank you.