80–110 Dearomatized Solvent · European B2B Sourcing

80–110 Dearomatized Solvent: Price, Spec & SDS

Light low-toxicity narrow-cut for adhesives, rubber, coatings and cleaning, boiling range 78–113°C, aromatics max 0.01 wt%, aniline point max 65°C, n-hexane max 4.9 wt%.

This grade is typically evaluated where a light, ultra-low-aromatic hydrocarbon with a well-defined multi-point distillation profile and solvency guidance is required, and 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 light, flammable hydrocarbon. With an IBP starting at 78°C, the flash point places this grade in flammable liquid classification for handling and transport. The n-hexane limit of max 4.9 wt%, more than double the 60–95 S, requires occupational exposure assessment. In practice: buyers typically review the SDS first to confirm flash point, classification and n-hexane OEL implications before proceeding with pricing or approval.
Boiling range 78–113°CIBP, 10%, 50% and dry point all specified, more distillation control than a standard narrow-cut.
Aromatics max 0.01 wt% + aniline point max 65°CNear-isoparaffinic purity with solvency guidance for rubber and adhesive applications.
n-Hexane max 4.9 wt%, OEL assessment requiredHigher than the 60–95 S. Assess against actual use conditions before approval.
No flash point stated, SDS required firstBefore handling, transport classification or approval can proceed.

Comparing with adjacent grades? See the 60–95 S page (lighter, tighter n-hexane), the 100–140 page (heavier range) or the isoparaffinic solvents page.

Availability and pricing can vary depending on allocation and supply route. Early validation avoids delays in approval and sourcing. Typical response from the relevant supplier in the network.

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 OEL assessment for the intended application and ventilation conditions
Current pricing logic for your volume, destination and packaging
Practical route, timing and packaging format discussion
Aromaticsmax 0.01 wt%
Boiling range78–113°C
n-Hexanemax 4.9 wt%, assess vs OEL
Flash pointNot stated, confirm with SDS
Light, fast-evaporating grade
Flammable liquid classification
n-Hexane max 4.9 wt%
Aniline point max 65°C
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, n-hexane OEL assessment or site approval. The SDS is the starting point.

01

Flash point classification

No flash point is stated in the supplied specification. With an IBP starting at 78°C, this grade should be treated as a flammable light hydrocarbon until the current SDS confirms the exact flash point and classification. GHS classification, ADR transport category and all site handling requirements must be confirmed before any commercial discussion proceeds.

02

n-Hexane at 4.9 wt%

n-Hexane is controlled at max 4.9 wt%, more than double the 60–95 S grade's 2 wt% limit. Buyers comparing both grades or switching from 60–95 S should assess the OEL implications against actual use conditions, ventilation and local regulations before selecting.

03

Approval friction

First orders for light narrow-cut grades with n-hexane controls routinely stop at SDS review, REACH assessment or internal EHS approval. Getting documentation into the discussion early shortens the overall approval timeline.

04

Availability

This is a speciality narrow-cut 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.

05

Late validation risk

Late confirmation of flash point classification or n-hexane exposure limits is one of the most common causes of delay in first orders for this type of solvent. Addressing both at documentation stage, before pricing, avoids the most frequent sources of friction.

Grade position

A well-specified narrow-cut with aniline point and multi-point distillation control

The 80/110 designation refers to the boiling range. What distinguishes this grade from simpler narrow-cuts is the level of distillation detail: IBP is bounded both above and below (78–92°C), and the 10% and 50% boiling points are also specified alongside the dry point range (100–113°C). That gives a clearer picture of the evaporation curve than a simple IBP and dry point alone provide.

The aniline point specification (max 65°C) is the other differentiator. This parameter, not common in every dearomatized spec, provides direct guidance on solvency character, making this grade specifically relevant for rubber and adhesive applications where solvent interaction with polymers is part of the formulation design.

The n-hexane limit of max 4.9 wt% is higher than the 60–95 S (max 2 wt%), which is the key OEL-related distinction between these two closely related grades. Buyers switching between them should resolve this difference at documentation stage before price discussions begin.

At a glance

Technical snapshot: for fast buyer qualification

Aromatics ~max 0.01 wt% Near-isoparaffinic purity.
IBP range ~78–92°C Both min and max defined. 10%, 50% and dry point also specified.
Aniline point ~max 65°C Solvency guidance for rubber and adhesive applications.
n-Hexane ~max 4.9 wt% Higher than 60–95 S. 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 content~max 20 mg/kg
Aniline point~max 65°C
Colour, Saybolt~min +30
Non-volatile matter~max 24 g/m³
Sulfur content~max 1 mg/kg
Flash pointNot stated in supplied spec
n-Hexane content~max 4.9 wt%
Initial boiling point~78–92°C
10% boiling point~max 97°C
50% boiling point~max 107°C
Dry point~100–113°C
Recovery~min 97%
Two parameters require immediate attention:

Flash point: not stated in the supplied specification. With an IBP starting at 78°C this grade is a flammable liquid, confirm GHS classification, ADR transport category and all handling requirements from the current SDS before any approval or use.

n-Hexane: max 4.9 wt%, more than double the 60–95 S limit of 2 wt%. Occupational exposure assessment against local OEL regulations is required. Buyers switching from 60–95 S should re-evaluate this parameter before finalising grade selection.

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

Grade fit

When this 80–110 route usually makes sense: and when it does not

This grade is selected when a light narrow-cut hydrocarbon with ultra-low aromatics, a defined multi-point distillation profile and aniline point guidance is required, and when the n-hexane OEL assessment at max 4.9 wt% is acceptable for the intended application.

01

Choose this route when

The application requires a 78–113°C narrow-cut with max 0.01 wt% aromatics, aniline point guidance for rubber or adhesive solvency, and a multi-point distillation profile, and the n-hexane OEL assessment at 4.9 wt% max is acceptable.

02

Choose 60–95 S instead when

A lighter boiling range is needed or n-hexane OEL compliance requires the tighter 2 wt% limit of the 60–95 S grade. The aromatic purity is the same in both grades.

03

Consider 100–140 or isoparaffinics when

The process requires a heavier boiling range (100–140 cut), or a fully isoparaffinic hydrocarbon structure is needed for specific solvency or regulatory reasons.

04

Always verify

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

Key distinction from the 60–95 S: the n-hexane limit in this grade is max 4.9 wt% versus max 2 wt% in the 60–95 S. If n-hexane OEL compliance is a tight constraint in the intended application, that difference should be resolved at documentation stage, before price discussions begin.

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, aniline point specification and the light boiling range. Actual suitability always depends on the approved specification and intended use conditions.

Adhesives

Adhesive formulations

The aniline point specification (max 65°C) is directly relevant in adhesive systems, particularly rubber-based and polymer formulations where solvency character affects application and bonding behaviour.

Rubber

Rubber processing and compounding

Reviewed in rubber industry discussions where a light dearomatized process solvent with controlled aniline point, low aromatics and n-hexane documentation is part of the processing specification.

Cleaning

Industrial and precision cleaning

Relevant where fast evaporation, ultra-low aromatic content and a well-defined multi-point distillation profile are part of the cleaning process specification.

Coatings

Coatings and surface treatment

Can appear in coating formulations where a light, low-aromatic carrier with a defined evaporation curve and solvency character is required.

Consumer products

Consumer-grade formulations

Used in consumer product discussions where low-toxicity profile, controlled aromatics and n-hexane documentation are relevant to product safety and regulatory compliance.

Substitution

Grade comparison and substitution review

Often reviewed alongside the 60–95 S, isoparaffinic solvents or SBP cuts when buyers need to select the right light hydrocarbon profile for a specific formulation or compliance requirement.

General

General industrial blending

Also used by distributors and formulators who need a light dearomatized narrow-cut with documented aromatic purity and aniline point for ongoing industrial demand.

Supply continuity

Alternative sourcing discussions

Also relevant for buyers who already have a route and want a second sourcing discussion for continuity, benchmarking or qualification purposes.

Buying checklist

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

Documentation comes before the commercial discussion for this grade. Flash point, n-hexane OEL and aniline point relevance are the three items that most affect first-order timelines.

Has the flash point been confirmed from the SDS? No flash point is stated in the supplied specification. GHS classification, ADR transport category and all site handling requirements must be confirmed before proceeding. This is the first check.
Has the n-hexane content been assessed against OEL requirements? The specification limits n-hexane to max 4.9 wt%, more than double the 60–95 S limit. Buyers switching from 60–95 S should re-evaluate before finalising grade selection. Assessment against local OEL regulations, actual use conditions and ventilation is required.
Is the aniline point relevant to the application? The specification includes an aniline point of max 65°C. For adhesive and rubber applications this parameter governs solvency behaviour and should be matched against formulation requirements before approval.
Does the multi-point distillation profile fit the process? IBP (78–92°C), 10% point (max 97°C), 50% point (max 107°C) and dry point (100–113°C) are all specified. Review the full evaporation curve against process requirements, not just the boiling range endpoints.
Is the packaging and transport route practical? For a 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 compare this grade with the 60–95 S (lighter, tighter n-hexane limit), the 100–140 cut (heavier boiling range) or isoparaffinic solvents. The right answer depends on boiling range, n-hexane tolerance, aniline point relevance and the documentation that will 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 and n-hexane content drive the approval process, getting the current SDS and specification into the discussion at the first stage avoids the most common source of delay.

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 flammable light hydrocarbon, bulk versus IBC versus drums 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 an 80–110 dearomatized hydrocarbon solvent?

A narrow-range low-toxicity dearomatized hydrocarbon fluid with IBP 78–92°C, dry point 100–113°C, aromatic content max 0.01 wt% and aniline point max 65°C. No flash point is stated, the SDS must be reviewed before any handling or approval discussion.

How does the 80–110 differ from the 60–95 S?

The 80–110 has a heavier boiling range (IBP 78–92°C vs 63–68°C) and a higher n-hexane limit at max 4.9 wt% versus max 2 wt% for the 60–95 S. The aromatic content limit is the same at max 0.01 wt%. The aniline point specification in the 80–110 is an additional parameter not present in the 60–95 S spec. Buyers should assess which n-hexane limit fits their OEL requirements.

What is the aniline point and why does it matter?

Aniline point is a measure of hydrocarbon solvency, a lower value indicates higher solvency power. The specification shows a maximum of 65°C, relevant for rubber and adhesive applications where solvent interaction with polymers affects processing behaviour. It is one of the parameters that distinguishes this grade from simpler narrow-cut fluids.

Why is no flash point stated in the specification?

The supplied specification does not include a flash point value. With an IBP starting at 78°C, this grade should be treated as a flammable light hydrocarbon requiring specific transport and site handling classification. Flash point and GHS classification must be confirmed from the actual SDS before any ordering, handling or transport discussion proceeds.

Can it be supplied in bulk, IBC and drums?

Yes, depending on volume, route and current supply position. For a 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. Requesting the SDS at the start of the discussion is strongly recommended given the flash point and n-hexane classification implications.

Send an enquiry

80–110 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, used by buyers to validate price, availability and technical fit before committing internally. Industrial B2B enquiries only.

Include destination and approximate volume for a more realistic first answer.
Requesting the SDS at the start is recommended, flash point and n-hexane OEL assessment are the first internal review items.
Mention whether you are comparing with the 60–95 S or another light hydrocarbon route, and whether aniline point is a formulation 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.

Typical response from the relevant supplier in the network. Contact details are used solely to respond to this enquiry.

Enquiry received.

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