no, base
dimethylamine
dimethylamine
dimethylamine
Stearamidopropyl dimethylamine is water soluble. You should be able to just stir into warm water. Seeing it is made of rapeseed oil, it should dissolve as you stir. To dissolve for the purposes of a conditioner: Add stearamidopropyl dimethylamine, lactic acid, PEG 400 distearate and sodium sulfate to water. Heat to 150ºF and blend well until the emulsion is homogenous. Cool to 120ºF before add preservative, fragrances or dyes. After the emulsion is cool, add it to bottles.
it is possible to product mannich base using acetophenone with DEA.
Michael Peter Gulan has written: 'Measurement of dimethylamine and trimethylamine in Dungeness crab, Cancer magister' -- subject(s): Dungeness crab
There are so many different examples of soluble organics. Some of the common ones include thyroid and steroid hormones, dimethylamine, acetic acid and so much more.
Dicamba, mecoprop-p and 2,4-Dicamba dimethylamine salt are the active ingredients in the herbicide Weed B Gone. They respectively contribute 5.3, 3.05 and 1.3 percent to the weed killer in question whereas inactive ingredients take up the remaining 90.35 percent. The United States Environmental Protection Agency- (USEPA-) required label is available on the internet for those who are possible shoppers, not yet actual buyers, of the broadleaf weed-killing product.
Salt water is a solution of salt, containing of course salt.
No. salt water is salt water. it already has salt in it
salt is not from salt water