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propenederived

Propenederived is an adjective used in chemistry and industry to describe compounds, materials, or intermediates that are manufactured from propene (propylene), a three-carbon olefin that serves as a major petrochemical feedstock. The label encompasses a broad range of products formed by functionalizing, oxidizing, reducing, or polymerizing propene, including polymers, small molecules, and specialty chemicals.

Propene is produced in large volumes from petroleum feedstocks and is converted into diverse products through

Key examples of propenederived products include:

- Polypropylene, a widely used plastic polymer.

- Propylene oxide, an important epoxide for making polyether polyols and epoxy resins.

- Acrylonitrile, produced by ammoxidation of propene and used in acrylic fibers and resins.

- Isopropylbenzene (cumene), formed by alkylation of benzene with propene, and its downstream products phenol and acetone.

- Isopropanol (propan-2-ol), obtained by hydration of propene.

- Butanal and related aldehydes produced by hydroformylation of propene, used as chemical intermediates.

The concept helps categorize materials by the propene-derived origin of their carbon framework, highlighting connections within

processes
such
as
polymerization,
epoxidation,
ammoxidation,
hydroformylation,
and
hydration.
This
makes
many
widely
used
materials
“propenederived.”
The
term
is
often
applied
in
industrial
contexts
to
group
products
by
their
shared
origin
from
propene
rather
than
by
their
functional
class
alone.
the
petrochemical
and
plastics
industries.
See
also
propene,
polypropylene,
propylene
oxide,
acrylonitrile,
and
cumene.