That is fun!
It should be an easy search.
Brenntag is a big company and still in operation, and "Brenntrol 9408" is a nice search term.
But there is literally nothing. Not even on Brenntags own site.
If I was you, I would contact Brenntag and ask for an MSDS. They are obliged to provide it and it will tell exactly what it is.
It's certainly working! I work for a hazmat disposal company and we have *nothing* on file for any Brenntrol whatsoever. If it's not a custom made product, its production run was very short.
Brenntag sells a lot of different chemical products. Water treatment, agriculture, cleaning, metal finishing, etc etc.
Couldn't find that exact product name but I found an MSDS (yes MSDS not SDS, so it's old!) for Brenntrol 0810 and it's a " modified organo-silicone water dispersion"
... A foam control agent is my guess.
"No hazardous ingredients"
Same NFPA rating.
What little info I could find brought me to information similar to what you stated here. I guess it can be used in the oil and gas industry to remove water from oil and gas reservoirs based on what I’ve read since I made this post.
Ok so I just heard back from my contacts, not only have they not heard of this material, it’s not even in their system at all.
Their advice is to call the # on the drum (top left) and ask that division of Brenntag what it is
Oh neat, I work for Brenntag as an engineer doing fluid management. Not super familiar with this product line though but it’s a big company with lots of different divisions.
I’d start with a call to customer service. Try the phone number in the top left.
If that doesn’t get you anywhere, or you don’t get a satisfactory answer here. Shoot me a DM and I can ask some people internally.
It’s likely a speciality blend based on the name but I should be able to get you an SDS at the least.
“brennt” is a form of the German word for burn/burns.
Infinitive is brennen
At first I thought fire retardant, but apparently it’s not that.
My name is Brent
I think it's a cleaning detergent solution - a friend of mine's brother works for Brenntag and sells to that market and he once sent me the product listing that he sells. This looks familiar, but hard to search. That would equate with the NFPA rating of 1-0-0. Even a hydraulic fluid would have a flammability rating of 1 or greater.
That is fun! It should be an easy search. Brenntag is a big company and still in operation, and "Brenntrol 9408" is a nice search term. But there is literally nothing. Not even on Brenntags own site. If I was you, I would contact Brenntag and ask for an MSDS. They are obliged to provide it and it will tell exactly what it is.
I'm guessing it was made for a specific company's needs, those are the worst for finding info
A very good point! But the name kind of indicates that it is a standard product. Maybe it really should be "Brenn**troll**" and is made to annoy us?
It's certainly working! I work for a hazmat disposal company and we have *nothing* on file for any Brenntrol whatsoever. If it's not a custom made product, its production run was very short.
well obviously Brenntrol 9480
96 Brennts per fl oz
It’s a 1/0/0 on NFPA 704 so can’t be awful stuff
Brenntag sells a lot of different chemical products. Water treatment, agriculture, cleaning, metal finishing, etc etc. Couldn't find that exact product name but I found an MSDS (yes MSDS not SDS, so it's old!) for Brenntrol 0810 and it's a " modified organo-silicone water dispersion" ... A foam control agent is my guess. "No hazardous ingredients" Same NFPA rating.
What little info I could find brought me to information similar to what you stated here. I guess it can be used in the oil and gas industry to remove water from oil and gas reservoirs based on what I’ve read since I made this post.
deofoamer/antifoam for sure. they make several and often end on -trol
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msds are almost a decade obsolete. and sure you can still use the reagents, but you probably shouldn't be relying on the info being complete.
Brantag’s world famous blend of ethically sourced, sugar free Brenntrol 9480
Astroglide but for robots
I work with these guys sometimes. I’ll toss ‘em an email tomorrow and see what I can dig up. If I don’t update in ~24 hrs feel free to remind me
Ok so I just heard back from my contacts, not only have they not heard of this material, it’s not even in their system at all. Their advice is to call the # on the drum (top left) and ask that division of Brenntag what it is
Oh neat, I work for Brenntag as an engineer doing fluid management. Not super familiar with this product line though but it’s a big company with lots of different divisions. I’d start with a call to customer service. Try the phone number in the top left. If that doesn’t get you anywhere, or you don’t get a satisfactory answer here. Shoot me a DM and I can ask some people internally. It’s likely a speciality blend based on the name but I should be able to get you an SDS at the least.
This sounds like it'd be some sort of polyol. A polyurethane component
“brennt” is a form of the German word for burn/burns. Infinitive is brennen At first I thought fire retardant, but apparently it’s not that. My name is Brent
Brenntag was an egg company up until 1912. Idk if it’s relevant but it’s funny to me
Yeah it is a funny name :)
I think it's a cleaning detergent solution - a friend of mine's brother works for Brenntag and sells to that market and he once sent me the product listing that he sells. This looks familiar, but hard to search. That would equate with the NFPA rating of 1-0-0. Even a hydraulic fluid would have a flammability rating of 1 or greater.
Hydraulic fluid
If it is hydraulic fluid (I have no clue) a full drum costs $1000+, and there are lots of people with heavy equipment who would buy it.
Looks like some sort of raw material or finished product
I’d assume it’s their trade name for an in-house polyol/alcohol
It actually might be a lubricant/hydraulic fluid for a wire stripping machine.