|
HS Code |
633593 |
| Product Name | NAN YA DEHP PVC Plasticizer |
| Chemical Name | Bis(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate |
| Common Abbreviation | DEHP |
| Molecular Formula | C24H38O4 |
| Molecular Weight | 390.56 g/mol |
| Appearance | Colorless, oily liquid |
| Odor | Slight ester odor |
| Boiling Point | 385°C |
| Density | 0.983 g/cm³ (at 25°C) |
| Refractive Index | 1.485 (at 20°C) |
| Flash Point | 210°C (closed cup) |
| Water Solubility | Insoluble |
| Viscosity | 78 mPa·s (at 20°C) |
| Primary Use | Plasticizer for PVC (Polyvinyl Chloride) |
| Cas Number | 117-81-7 |
As an accredited NAN YA DEHP PVC Plasticizer factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.
| Packing | NAN YA DEHP PVC Plasticizer is packaged in 200 kg blue steel drums, labeled with product name, manufacturer, and safety information. |
| Container Loading (20′ FCL) | Container Loading (20′ FCL) for NAN YA DEHP PVC Plasticizer typically accommodates 80-100 drums or 20-22 metric tons per container. |
| Shipping | NAN YA DEHP PVC Plasticizer is shipped in sealed, high-density polyethylene (HDPE) drums or ISO tanks to prevent leakage and contamination. Each container is clearly labeled, complying with hazardous material regulations. Proper handling and storage at controlled temperatures are required to ensure safety throughout transportation. Shipping documentation accompanies every shipment. |
| Storage | NAN YA DEHP PVC Plasticizer should be stored in a cool, dry, well-ventilated area away from heat sources, direct sunlight, and incompatible materials like strong acids and bases. Keep containers tightly sealed to prevent contamination or leakage. Store at temperatures between 5°C and 40°C, and ensure proper labeling. Use suitable containers made of compatible materials, such as stainless steel or polyethylene. |
| Shelf Life | The shelf life of NAN YA DEHP PVC Plasticizer is typically 12 months when stored in cool, dry, and well-ventilated conditions. |
Competitive NAN YA DEHP PVC Plasticizer prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.
For samples, pricing, or more information, please call us at +8615365186327 or mail to sales3@liwei-chem.com.
We will respond to you as soon as possible.
Tel: +8615365186327
Email: sales3@liwei-chem.com
Flexible payment, competitive price, premium service - Inquire now!
Producing DEHP (Di-2-ethylhexyl phthalate) plasticizer day after day has taught us plenty about what the PVC industry actually looks for. At our facilities, we have worked with raw materials, managed process conditions, and listened to customers who rely on consistent, high-quality performance. NAN YA DEHP is not just a line-item on a specification sheet for us; it is the result of steady improvements, practical feedback, and a long-standing commitment to materials science. Over the years, customers in molding, cable manufacturing, film extrusion, and other sectors have come to expect clear, reliable results from every delivery.
With the DEHP plasticizer bearing the NAN YA name, every batch meets strict benchmarks for purity, color, and odor. Numbers on a certificate of analysis are one thing, but what matters in practice is how the plasticizer behaves on the factory floor. NAN YA DEHP typically shows water content below 0.1%, color standards meeting APHA < 30, and consistent specific gravity near 0.983 at room temperature. Our production lines are calibrated with automatic systems and regular operator checks, so out-of-spec product never leaves our gate. Each model in our portfolio reflects minor adjustments—tighter water limits, improved color stability, or modified handling characteristics—often based on customer feedback from hundreds of different processing environments.
The first expectation customers share with us involves processability. Whether running a calendaring line for soft PVC sheets or compounding cable insulation, every kilogram of plasticizer needs to blend rapidly and thoroughly. Poor compatibility leads to surface defects, uneven plasticization, or even rejections from end-users. After years of tuning our process, we see NAN YA DEHP performing at the top of its class for compatibility and ease of dispersion. The result: cleaner mixing, faster cycle times, less downtime hunting for process settings, and fewer scrap parts to deal with.
Odor and color matter not just in pure technical sense, but also on the production floor and in finished goods. Reused molds, tight spaces, and operators handling material handling lines all notice when a plasticizer smells off or tints a supposedly colorless product. Our teams monitor batches for low odor signatures and near-water-clear visual appearance. The glassware may be clean, but our experience says noses and eyes tell the truth more quickly than many sensors. This focus keeps our DEHP plasticizer versatile, ready to use in transparent films, medical tubing (where allowed), flexible containers, and wire jacketing.
We get to see our plasticizer in action across many applications. Wire and cable manufacturers appreciate the predictable flexibility NAN YA DEHP lends to jacketing and insulation, letting them run lines without sudden changes in softness or elongation. Flooring plants need vinyl sheets that roll up without cracking, then lay flat in the field with stable color—no smells or hazing. Flexible film makers call out the stable flow behavior, which helps avoid wrinkles and gels. In inflatable toys or automotive interiors, the finished PVC needs to maintain resilience over years, not just pass a quick stress test. We routinely speak to processors who rely on our knowledge of resin-to-plasticizer ratios, migration rates, and long-term stability under sunlight or heat.
Some regions regulate certain uses, especially in sensitive applications. Where restrictions apply, we help customers adapt by offering guidance on suitable alternatives and help line up trials, as we believe in responsible stewardship as much as operational support.
Having produced plasticizer for decades, we’ve watched the market fill with suppliers offering bold claims. So, where does NAN YA DEHP really set itself apart? The answer always comes back to daily operations. Consistency might not sound glamorous, but it is the difference between lost hours and efficient uptime. Smaller producers, resellers, or newcomers often struggle to hold specifications across shipments, especially when feedstock prices or logistics shift. We run large, tightly controlled batches and have teams skilled at quickly tracing root causes if issues ever arise. Decades of ongoing improvements let us resist haze, color drift, or batch-to-batch viscosity changes that can slow down a busy customer.
Back in the early days, we often saw handling or transport problems turn a technically perfect batch into customer headaches. We now design logistics—from tank trucks to IBCs and drum packing—with safeguards that help material arrive as fresh as when it left our lines. Temperature excursions, leaks, and container residues have dropped sharply from the 90s, thanks to engineered packaging solutions, rigorous inspection processes, and proactive carrier selection.
Technical support is where real value emerges. Unlike traders who sell and disappear, our engineers and tech support staff get involved—sometimes right on site, other times by video conference or detailed phone calls. We run laboratory simulations of customer recipes, share data packages, and discuss alternatives if unusual requirements come up. Over many years, this direct interaction has shaped our product portfolio, moving us toward formulations that address real-world PVC processing challenges, not just standard lab tests.
It is one thing to meet a test once. Achieving hundreds of good batches each year requires practical systems. We rely on in-line monitoring for key parameters, but just as important are experienced operators who spot subtle cues—slight haze, smell, or temperature drift. We maintain detailed logs and sample retention programs, so any deviation can be rapidly traced, not buried under layers of paperwork. Feedback loops between production and R&D mean that whenever a customer points out a new challenge or opportunity, tweaks can be tried and scaled up quickly.
Some colleagues in other companies get bogged down in paperwork or legacy approvals, which can stretch solutions over quarters or even years. Our groups, from operators through management, keep the lines of communication short, letting qualified adjustments roll out in reasonable time frames. This kind of flexibility makes all the difference after raw material shortage, a customer recipe shift, or even an unexpected regulatory adjustment.
Plasticizer manufacturing throws up practical challenges. One recurring issue across the global market is raw material volatility. We have seen upstream price spikes in 2-EH and phthalic anhydride disrupt not only costs, but also speculative quality claims by traders. We secure supply through long-term partnerships and transparent planning, which means customers rarely see supply interruptions.
Another problem that crops up is product migration or volatility, especially under heat, sunlight, or pressure. Longer than a simple lab shelf test, actual field exposure can lead to plastisol separation or stain migration in flooring. To counter this, our formulation scientists continually evaluate stabilization additives and alternative process conditions to extend material life, not just initial passing results.
Regulatory scrutiny on phthalates, particularly in Europe and North America, continues to evolve. While some fearmongering exists, issues related to toxicity and environmental persistence carry real weight, especially for sensitive applications. Rather than resist these changes, we regularly review global standards, redesign recipes for special markets, and introduce alternatives in close partnership with downstream partners. We understand the value of trustworthy, verified data—our in-house and third-party analytical results are always available for inspection.
Making DEHP brings with it a duty to minimize environmental impact and ensure workplace safety. Decades ago, releases or handling mistakes led to isolated incidents or regulatory fines across our industry. We’ve adapted by installing closed-loop systems, onsite recovery units, and rigorous air and water monitoring. Workers now handle DEHP in systems designed to minimize direct contact and vapor exposure. Training never stops, as it only takes one shortcut to cause an incident.
Waste streams from batch flushes or equipment cleanout no longer go out untreated. We collect and treat these wastes on-site, returning as much as possible to the process and reducing landfill or off-site incineration needs. This practice is not only better for the environment; it drives down operational costs by minimizing raw material losses and regulatory burden.
For us, shipping out a drum or ISO tank is not the end of the story. Many processors grapple with problems like poor blending, settling, or off-spec end products caused by minor changes in handling or recipe drift. Our field teams regularly help customers tweak compounding and extrusion settings to get the most out of every batch. We value shared knowledge, often guiding customers through unfamiliar formulations or regulatory reviews.
A large fraction of requests come from customers looking to optimize their formulations—be that balancing cost, improving throughput, or extending product service life. We maintain a technical advice desk not staffed by marketers, but by chemists and engineers who have spent time on production lines just like our customers. This hands-on expertise helps catch issues before they turn into calls from unhappy end-users, saving everyone time and money.
Innovation does not always mean chasing unproven technology. Sometimes, it is about working with end-users to find cost-neutral ways of tightening process control or enhancing performance under demanding field conditions. Over the years, we have invested in pilot lines, customer trials, and laboratory analytics aimed at evolving our DEHP product line. Our goal: balance plasticizer performance with attention to regulatory and environmental requirements. Recent updates in anti-migration packages, odor masking, and high-transparency options reflect feedback from vinyl flooring, automotive, and specialty film producers.
Sustainability efforts guide long-term R&D decisions. Our teams work to reduce process energy use, recover heat from distillation steps, and reduce water usage per ton produced. Where feasible, we introduce bio-based feedstocks for NON-PVC phthalate alternatives, but we keep quality as the primary yardstick. Each alternative weighs cost, compatibility, and product lifespan with real-world customer needs, not just a headline.
Anyone can read a data sheet, but years at the operator console, visits to customer plants, and rounds with auditors have shown us what separates a reliable plasticizer from the rest. NAN YA DEHP stands on more than numbers. It reflects what is possible with a manufacturing base built for consistency, transparency in technical advice, and a real-world understanding of the industries we serve. Our customers rely on more than just plasticizer; they turn to us for practical solutions, contemporary compliance, and the confidence that batches delivered today will perform reliably throughout production and product life.
The future of plasticized PVC will doubtless hold new challenges. We plan to continue adapting, leveraging what we have learned, reinvesting where progress needs to happen, and always keeping customer operations and product requirements at the core of our work. This approach, grounded in practical experience, is what keeps NAN YA DEHP ahead—both on your production floor and in the end market.