60–95 S Dearomatized Solvent · European B2B Sourcing

60–95 S Dearomatized Solvent: Price, Spec & SDS

Ultra-light low-toxicity narrow-cut fluid, boiling range 63–100°C, aromatics max 0.01 wt%, n-hexane max 2 wt%. For buyers who need a specific light distillation profile with documented composition control.

This grade is typically evaluated where a very light, ultra-low-aromatic hydrocarbon is required, but only if flash point classification and n-hexane limits fit within the application and site conditions.

We help industrial buyers validate whether supply, documentation and pricing are actually workable, before internal approval or ordering.

Market reality: supply of light narrow-cut grades is not always available on demand. Availability is not guaranteed and depends on allocation, route and timing. Pricing and availability are confirmed case by case.
Important for this grade: this is a very light, fast-evaporating hydrocarbon. With an initial boiling point of 63°C, the flash point is well below 21°C, which places it in flammable liquid classification for handling and transport.

The specification also limits n-hexane to max 2 wt%, which may require occupational exposure assessment depending on the application.

In practice: buyers typically review the SDS first to confirm flash point, classification and handling requirements before proceeding with pricing or approval.
Boiling range 63–100°CIBP and dry point both tightly defined. Total boiling window approximately 30°C.
Aromatics max 0.01 wt%Near-isoparaffinic aromatic purity in a light, fast-evaporating cut.
n-Hexane max 2 wt%, OEL assessment requiredConfirm current values with the actual SDS before approval.
No flash point stated, SDS required firstBefore any handling, transport classification or approval discussion.

Comparing with adjacent grades? See the 100–140 page, the isoparaffinic solvents page or the SBP cuts guide.

Availability and pricing can vary depending on allocation and supply route. Early validation avoids delays in approval and sourcing.

Fast commercial starting point

What you typically need from this enquiry

A good first response confirms whether the requirement is commercially executable, technically suitable and documentable for your process and site.

First responses typically confirm whether the request is commercially executable, not just technically possible
Flash point, GHS classification and transport requirements from the actual SDS, this comes first
n-Hexane content confirmation and occupational exposure implications for the intended use
Current pricing logic for your volume, destination and packaging
Practical route, timing and packaging format discussion
Aromaticsmax 0.01 wt%
Boiling range63–100°C
n-Hexanemax 2 wt%, confirm with SDS
Flash pointNot stated, confirm with SDS
Very light, fast-evaporating grade
Flammable liquid classification
n-Hexane content controlled
SDS review recommended first
Industrial B2B buyers only

Market reality

Why serious buyers get the SDS first: before going any further

Most enquiries in this category stall not at price, but at handling classification, site approval or occupational health review. The SDS is the starting point, not an afterthought.

01

Flash point classification

No flash point is stated in the supplied specification. With an IBP starting at 63°C, this grade is a highly flammable liquid. Transport classification, storage rules and site handling requirements must be confirmed from the SDS before any commercial discussion proceeds.

02

n-Hexane content

The specification controls n-hexane at a maximum of 2 wt%. n-Hexane has a specific occupational exposure limit and chronic neurotoxicity profile. Buyers must assess this against their application, ventilation conditions and local OEL regulations before approval.

03

Approval friction

First orders for light narrow-cut grades with composition controls routinely stop at the SDS, REACH review or internal EHS gate. Getting documentation into the discussion at the earliest stage shortens approval timelines significantly.

04

Availability

This is a speciality grade. Availability is not guaranteed and depends on allocation, timing and supply route. Early commercial validation, including documentation, avoids the most common cause of delayed first orders.

Grade position

A low-toxicity light narrow-cut with controlled n-hexane and near-isoparaffinic purity

The 60/95 S designation refers to the boiling range and a controlled composition grade. The boiling window is one of the tightest on this site: IBP is specified between 63 and 68°C, dry point between 90 and 100°C, a total range of roughly 30°C. That tight profile, combined with aromatic content of max 0.01 wt%, makes this grade relevant for applications requiring a specific, predictable light hydrocarbon solvent with near-isoparaffinic aromatic purity.

The S suffix indicates controlled composition parameters, specifically n-hexane limited to max 2 wt%. The supplied product description describes this as a low toxicity dearomatized fluid, a designation driven by the low aromatic content and n-hexane control relative to conventional light hydrocarbon solvents. However, buyers must not interpret this as meaning the grade is without handling or classification requirements. The SDS governs, not the product name.

At a glance

Technical snapshot: for fast buyer qualification

Aromatics ~max 0.01 wt% Near-isoparaffinic purity in a light cut.
IBP range ~63–68°C Both min and max specified, very tight entry point.
Dry point ~90–100°C Total boiling window approximately 30°C.
n-Hexane ~max 2 wt% Composition-controlled, assess against OEL requirements. Flash point not stated.

Technical snapshot

Current sales-spec snapshot: practical starting point

Key specification values from the supplied document. The actual quoted SDS and specification always govern.

AppearanceBright & Clear
Aromatic content~max 0.01 wt%
Benzene/Toluene content~max 35 mg/kg
Colour, Saybolt~min +30
Density at 15°C~690–710 kg/m³
Non-volatile matter~max 10 g/m³
Sulfur content~max 1 mg/kg
Flash pointNot stated in supplied spec
Initial boiling point~63–68°C
Dry point~90–100°C
n-Hexane content~max 2 wt%
Important, two parameters require immediate attention:

Flash point: not stated in the supplied specification. With an IBP of 63°C this grade is a highly flammable liquid, confirm GHS classification, ADR transport class and all handling requirements from the current SDS before any approval or use.

n-Hexane: the limit of max 2 wt% is a key composition control parameter. Buyers must assess occupational exposure implications against local OEL regulations and actual use conditions. Equivalent materials may carry different commercial designations by different producers.

All values are indicative. SDS, TDS and CoA available on request prior to supply.

Grade fit

When this 60–95 S route usually makes sense: and when it does not

This grade is selected when a very light, fast-evaporating, ultra-low-aromatic hydrocarbon with a controlled composition profile is required. The selection is driven by the combination of boiling range, aromatic purity and n-hexane limit, not by any single parameter alone.

01

Choose this route when

The application requires a 63–100°C light hydrocarbon solvent with max 0.01 wt% aromatics and a documented n-hexane limit, for example in adhesives, rubber processing, precision cleaning or low-toxicity consumer formulations.

02

Consider the 100–140 cut when

The process requires a slightly heavier boiling range but similar aromatic purity. The 100–140 grade has the same aromatic limit but a higher, slower-evaporating distillation window.

03

Consider isoparaffinics or SBP cuts when

The application requires a fully isoparaffinic structure, or a broader light naphtha profile is acceptable. See the isoparaffinic solvents page and the SBP cuts guide.

04

Always verify

Flash point, GHS classification, n-hexane OEL assessment, transport rules and site handling requirements are all required before approval. Grade name and product description alone are never sufficient.

Before going further: the SDS for this grade should be requested at the very start of the enquiry, not after price agreement. Flash point classification and n-hexane exposure assessment are the two most common reasons enquiries in this category require more time than expected. Addressing both early avoids the most frequent sources of delay.

Applications

Where this type of light low-toxicity dearomatized solvent is commonly discussed in industrial use

The applications listed in the supplied product description reflect the combination of low aromatics, controlled n-hexane, fast evaporation and the light boiling range. Actual suitability always depends on the approved specification and intended use conditions.

Adhesives

Adhesive formulations and applications

Discussed where a light, fast-evaporating low-aromatic hydrocarbon carrier is needed and the n-hexane content and aromatic profile meet formulation and regulatory requirements.

Rubber

Rubber processing and compounding

Reviewed in rubber industry discussions where a light dearomatized process solvent with controlled aromatic and n-hexane content is part of the processing or formulation specification.

Cleaning

Precision and industrial cleaning

Relevant where fast evaporation, low aromatic content and a documented low-toxicity profile are all part of the cleaning process specification.

Coatings

Coatings and surface treatment

Can appear in coating and surface treatment formulations where a light, ultra-low-aromatic carrier with fast evaporation and defined composition is required.

Consumer products

Consumer-grade formulations

Used in consumer product discussions where the low-toxicity profile, controlled aromatics and specific boiling range are relevant to product safety and regulatory compliance.

Substitution

Isoparaffinic or SBP substitution review

Often reviewed alongside isoparaffinic solvents or SBP cuts when buyers need a light hydrocarbon profile with documented aromatic purity but the full isoparaffinic structure is not required.

Process fluids

Carrier and diluent applications

Used as a carrier or diluent in process applications where a very light, ultra-low-aromatic hydrocarbon with controlled composition is a product quality or regulatory requirement.

Buying checklist

What serious buyers usually check before sending an RFQ or opening internal approval

For this grade, the documentation review comes before the commercial discussion, not after. The flash point and n-hexane assessment are the two items that most frequently slow down first orders.

Has the flash point been confirmed from the SDS? No flash point is stated in the supplied specification. With an IBP of 63°C, GHS classification, ADR transport category and all site handling requirements must be confirmed before proceeding. This is the first check, not the last.
Has the n-hexane content been assessed? The specification limits n-hexane to max 2 wt%. n-Hexane has a specific occupational exposure limit and requires assessment against actual use conditions, ventilation and local regulations. The SDS provides the current figures and relevant guidance.
Does the 63–100°C boiling range fit the process? The IBP is specified between 63 and 68°C and the dry point between 90 and 100°C, a total window of approximately 30°C. Confirm that this specific range matches the evaporation and residue requirements for the application.
Will the documentation support approval? For a light, composition-controlled grade with occupational health implications, the approval path typically involves EHS, REACH and compliance review before procurement can sign off.
Is the packaging and transport route realistic? For a highly flammable light hydrocarbon, bulk, IBC and drum logistics each carry specific transport classification requirements that affect cost, feasibility and lead time.
Useful adjacent discussions: buyers often review this grade alongside the 100–140 cut, isoparaffinic solvents or SBP cuts. The right answer depends on the required boiling range, aromatic purity, n-hexane tolerance and the documentation that will actually pass internal EHS and compliance review.

Why Alcoris

Why buyers involve Alcoris instead of relying on generic product pages

A useful answer in this category must be commercially executable and documentation-ready from the first response.

Documentation first

Spec and SDS from the start

For grades where flash point classification and n-hexane content drive the approval process, getting the current SDS and specification into the discussion at the first stage avoids the delays that come from a price-first approach.

Supply routes

Multiple European sourcing discussions

Alcoris works with multiple European supply routes, which helps produce a realistic first answer on availability, timing and route, including for speciality narrow-cut grades where allocation matters.

Execution

Practical route review

For a light, highly flammable grade, bulk versus IBC versus drums is not cosmetic. It changes transport classification, handling cost, lead time and whether the discussion can become an order.

FAQ

Questions buyers ask before sending an enquiry or starting internal approval

What is a 60–95 S dearomatized hydrocarbon solvent?

It is a narrow-range low-toxicity dearomatized hydrocarbon fluid with a boiling range of 63–100°C and aromatic content of max 0.01 wt%. The S suffix indicates a controlled composition grade with n-hexane limited to max 2 wt%. No flash point is stated in the supplied specification, the SDS must be reviewed before any handling, transport or approval discussion.

What does the S suffix indicate?

The S suffix indicates controlled composition parameters beyond a standard grade, specifically n-hexane content limited to max 2 wt%. This distinguishes it from conventional light hydrocarbon grades where n-hexane content is not actively controlled, and is relevant for applications subject to occupational exposure limits.

Why is no flash point stated in the specification?

The supplied sales specification does not include a flash point value. With an IBP starting at 63°C, this grade is highly flammable and subject to specific transport and site handling classification. Flash point, GHS classification and all handling requirements must be confirmed from the actual SDS before any ordering or approval discussion proceeds.

Is n-hexane content a problem in practice?

n-Hexane has a specific occupational exposure limit and a chronic neurotoxicity profile at sustained high exposures. The specification limits it to max 2 wt%, which distinguishes this grade from uncontrolled light naphtha routes. Buyers must assess actual n-hexane exposure levels against local OEL regulations and the specific use conditions, ventilation, volume, contact duration, not just the specification value.

Can it be supplied in bulk, IBC and drums?

Yes, depending on volume, route and current supply position. For a highly flammable light hydrocarbon, transport classification and packaging logistics require specific review. All practical route details are confirmed at quotation stage.

Do you provide current specification and SDS?

Yes. Current sales specification and SDS can be shared during the quotation process. For this grade, requesting the SDS at the very start of the discussion, before price, is strongly recommended given the flash point and n-hexane classification implications.

Send an enquiry

60–95 S dearomatized hydrocarbon enquiry: price, specification, SDS and route review

A complete enquiry allows a commercially realistic answer from the relevant supplier in the network, including whether supply is actually possible under current market conditions.

No obligation enquiry, used by buyers to validate price, availability and technical fit before committing internally.

Industrial B2B enquiries only. Requesting the SDS at the start is recommended, flash point and n-hexane content are typically the first internal review items.

Include destination and approximate volume for a more realistic first answer.
Requesting the SDS at the start is recommended, flash point and n-hexane content are typically the first internal review items.
Mention whether this is a substitution discussion, a first qualification or an immediate requirement.
Spot and recurring requirements can both be discussed.

All offers are subject to availability and subject to final confirmation. Specification, packaging format, availability, timing and pricing are confirmed at quotation stage based on the current supply route. Buyers remain responsible for checking suitability for the intended use and for compliance with applicable regulations.

Response same day during EU working hours.

Contact details are used solely to respond to this enquiry.

Enquiry received.

A commercial response will follow from the relevant supplier in the network.