|
HS Code |
234024 |
| Chemical Name | Dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone |
| Molecular Formula | C13H17N3O |
| Molar Mass | 231.30 g/mol |
| Appearance | Yellow to orange crystalline powder |
| Solubility In Water | Slightly soluble |
| Melting Point | 168-170°C |
| Cas Number | 60-80-0 |
| Synonyms | 4-(Dimethylamino)antipyrine, Aminophenazone |
| Usage | Analytical reagent, mainly used in colorimetric determination of hydrogen peroxide |
| Storage Conditions | Store in a cool, dry place, tightly closed container |
| Stability | Stable under recommended storage conditions |
| Ph | Neutral to slightly basic (aqueous solution) |
| Color | Yellow |
As an accredited dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.
| Packing | The packaging is a 100-gram amber glass bottle, sealed, with a white label displaying "Dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone," hazard symbols, and batch number. |
| Container Loading (20′ FCL) | Container Loading (20′ FCL) for dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone typically involves secure drum or bag packaging, ensuring safe, efficient chemical transport. |
| Shipping | Dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone should be shipped in tightly sealed containers, protected from moisture and light. Use appropriate hazard labeling, as it may pose health and environmental risks. Transport via road, rail, or air must comply with local, national, and international regulations. Ensure proper documentation and safety data accompany the shipment at all times. |
| Storage | Dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone should be stored in a tightly sealed container, in a cool, dry, and well-ventilated area away from incompatible substances such as oxidizers and strong acids. Protect the chemical from moisture, heat, and direct sunlight. Proper labeling and secure storage are essential to prevent accidental exposure or chemical degradation. Use secondary containment to prevent spills or leaks. |
| Shelf Life | Dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone typically has a shelf life of 2-3 years when stored cool, dry, and protected from light. |
Competitive dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.
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Walking through our production halls, the sharp, clean aroma and the steady hum of precisely calibrated equipment tell a part of the story of our work with dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone. This material comes off our line with a consistency that only steady attention and small, often invisible, improvements to process can offer. Years of hands-on experience and tweaks to conditions, like temperature and solvent ratios, allow us to shape a product trusted on the factory floors of dye houses, ink formulators, and research labs with demanding protocols.
We produce dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone under the model name DMPDP-88 for our regular clients. Customers in dye and pigment synthesis often request material with a purity above 99.2% (GC), and we’ve learned through years of feedback and returns analysis that staying below 0.4% by-product or impurity level translates to less rework and better blending. Moisture content hovers at 0.2% or less, achieved through careful handling, storage, and repeatedly testing each drum before shipment.
Our product flows as a pale yellow crystalline powder, feeding smoothly through auger systems without clumping or bridging—a detail overlooked by those who do not keep hands in the production process. Particle sizes land reliably within the 70–120 mesh range to meet the demands of customers using automated dosing; clumps or oversize particles gum things up, cause expensive shutdowns, and we’ve logged those calls more than once in our earlier years. Our approach reduces those calls to nearly zero.
DMPDP-88 serves a niche as a coupling component in azo dye synthesis, especially for high-value shades where clarity and hue strength matter. Our regular shipments bring us into conversations with textile dye shops, color specialists in digital printing, metal marking ink blenders, and even developers targeting new pH indicators or analytical reagents.
Blenders favor our product for its predictable solubility in solvents such as ethanol and its reliability in both cold and hot coupling processes. Differences in impurities—even by a fraction—lead directly to changes in final color and stability, outcomes that determine recalls, failed certification, or second-choice sales. Testing alongside other producers' material, we've witnessed differences in tone and migration resistance in formal laboratory comparisons; often the shade shows slippage under UV or the stability in alkali dips, something that impacts downstream product warranties or product shelf life.
Research clients sometimes push the boundaries by applying dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone to specialty detection assays or as an intermediate in fine chemical synthesis beyond dyes. We work closely with these groups, knowing that trace contamination ruins output from a single batch and that analysis reveals everything. We keep impurities low, batch records transparent, and offer samples for trial runs with full analytical data to back up assurances.
Sourcing DMPDP-88 direct from our plant brings several distinctions that set us apart from resellers or branded traders. Our team controls the entire operation, from raw material receipt through to final bagging. Raw aniline and hydrazine derivatives are reviewed for uniformity before any reactors spin up. Each batch moves through a known route, shaped by operators who know that meeting test parameters on paper doesn’t always prevent a sticky hopper or a collapsed bag at the receiving end.
Complaints tend to boil down to performance in the customer’s process: slow dissolution, off-hue dye couplers, filter clogging, or residue in final product lines. We rarely hear such issues because our plant team has authority and the know-how to fix specifics, whether that means adjusting filtration mesh, switching to a different grade of activated carbon, or repeatedly purging and reloading reactors until all volatile bases are gone. Traders may ship a wide offering, but they rarely offer solutions for integrating product into the end-user workflow. Troubleshooting with them often means relaying messages through several links in the supply chain, with time lost and sometimes no improvements at all.
We keep DMPDP-88 dry and stable in airtight, moisture-proof packaging, tested in-house and retested before any overseas shipment. This level of control means our batch-to-batch reproducibility comes from one continuous process—not material consolidated from multiple plants or brokered on short notice. If a lot number from three years ago performed perfectly for a textile reactor, we can repeat it because the same process, team, and attention produced it. Resellers sometimes cannot trace material back past their warehouse; conversations about performance issues with them rarely lead to change.
Field chemists and engineers rarely edit their feedback. They seldom care for catalog claims or glossy product brochures; results that come from practical application matter more. Several longtime ink makers and paper colorants tell us that, compared to the consolidated material supplied by brokers, our dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone brings sharper color distinctions and fewer filtration stoppages. On textile lines, several buyers note increased dye uptake and better overall reproducibility of shades when shifting from generic or repacked versions to ours. Plant operators commonly mention a cleaner filtrate and more straightforward wastewater management, as the lack of heavy by-productions reduces treatment costs.
We maintain a direct dialogue with buyers about any trouble batches, application misses, or improvements they think worthwhile. For example, one year, a regular pigment manufacturer found slight particulate haze in new pigment dispersions, traced back to subtle changes in our drying profile. After reviewing process logs and running comparative crystal size analyses, our team altered drying and sieving protocols and achieved clearer dispersions without pushing up the process cost. Talking shop and technical learning—rather than hiding behind charts or promises—keeps us honest and always pushing to refine both product and service.
Sustainability is often more than just a slogan to paint on a website or label; it runs through every decision to use, recover, and recycle solvents and to minimize exposure to hazardous off-gases. In our work with dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone, we've built solvent recycling loops that capture and reuse more than 85% of process solvents—reducing both costs and environmental burden. Wastewaters move through multi-step treatment before discharge, cutting COD and ammonia. As operators who live by the plant fence line, these changes aren't just regulatory check-boxes but affect the company’s standing and the neighborhoods that share our water and air.
Investments that cut carbon emissions or hazardous inventory sometimes cost extra in the short term but pay out in longer runs, both financially and in staff retention. Air scrubbing and enclosure on dryers mean odor drops and exposure stays well below government limits—a point that anyone who’s worked a hot summer shift understands well. These steps also give us documented credibility whenever buyers run their own supplier audits or track environmental impacts up their value chain, often required these days by big brands or regulatory bodies.
Repeatedly, long-term customers remind us that consistent, trustworthy performance matters more than the lowest price. Technical data, spectral profiles, and trace analysis are always ready for every lot. Considering the number of suppliers out there, it’s these concrete records—together with steady products moving through customers’ batching lines—that make the difference. We give technical teams access to past and present batch records and comparisons so they can see, not guess, the details about what will go into their next process run.
We supply not just the finished product but the full history: synthesis route, critical process controls, and statistical performance over many years. Clients with strict compliance needs—ISO, GMP, or custom requirements—trust us as changes occur, because they see adaptation and openness, not excuses or blame-shifting. Batch failures or process interruptions push us to review not only plant logs but also upstream changes, process analytics, and worker interviews. Quality rarely improves by accident or outside intervention, but by incremental changes and clear ownership at every step.
Adapting to new customer challenges keeps the product line fresh and the plant team sharp. A few years back, a new client approached us with technical needs outside our core specification range: a finer fraction tailored for high-resolution digital print heads. That involved stepping out of usual comfort zones—retuning the milling setup, revising sieves, and running intensive QA checks. Now, that finer fraction is a recurring line item for several tech-focused coloring specialists; custom runs require tighter controls and extra time, but the relationship has built new business and grown our team’s skills.
Color strength variances, sensitivity to trace metals, or shifting preferences around residual solvents often drive changes year to year. We’ve invested in new analytical capability—ion chromatography and advanced spectral libraries—so our assessment captures more. Regular calls with customer R&D keep us aligned to where the market heads, not just where it has been. Creating special fractions or purifications for small-lot buyers opens channels for joint development, where customers’ feedback and investment fuel our own upgrades.
Maintaining authority over raw material selection brings real-world reliability. Over the years, we’ve sampled and tracked each supplier of starting chemicals. Choices to switch, skip, or reject shipments reflect process implications we understand from hands-on experience: feedstock with marginal assay, high moisture, or poor packaging causes downstream problems every time. The process team knows the aches of redoing loads and re-cleaning lines, learning early that leniency on raw quality means more waste, downtime, and upset customers.
Finished DMPDP-88 leaves our gate under our own seal, with no dilution, remixing, or relabeling. There’s no waiting for third-party clearance or stock movements between regional warehouses. Critically, this reduces the risk of contamination or counterfeiting—problems that rise sharply with extended chains and loosely managed brokers. Buyers count on seeing the same shipment profile they’ve validated. Long-haul sea or truck transit can test packaging integrity and dryness, so we’ve invested in multi-wall vapor barriers and desiccant placements that aren’t always found in generic, traded loads.
Freight partnerships and logistics are crucial. We build in buffer stocks on export, learning from past delays and weather snarls. Stockouts rarely occur because each link from plant to shipper sits under direct management. As teams that stand behind their cargo, we know: no amount of paperwork fixes a failed delivery, but preparation and deep familiarity with routes and customs requirements often do.
Regulatory compliance, especially related to chemicals like dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone, remains a central concern. Over the years, inspections and audits from global partners, certification bodies, and local agencies have shaped our procedures. We're not guessing what a European or North American regulator expects from a new shipment, nor how to document REACH or TSCA status. Our staff champions ongoing training and stays ahead of changes—whether new labeling, documentation, or reporting requirements. Spot audits, internal QC, and methodical record-keeping minimize surprise findings and turn compliance into a routine, not a scramble.
Long-term improvement often takes shape in the minor details—a slight formulation shift to lower residual solvents, a process tune to sharpen particle profile, or a work instruction change to trim waste. These changes build on hundreds of earlier tweaks, mapped and tracked for their process impact. Drawing on the collective habits and expertise of a plant crew, each adjustment ties directly to feedback from the line: more predictable performance in dye baths, sharper reproducibility in color labs, or easier tank cleaning after batch changes.
In our practice, documentation means more than storage: each COA, production log, and analytical chart supports traceability and recall—both as an internal standard and a customer expectation. Buyers familiar with audits or quality crises know the value of getting answers quickly, not chasing paperwork or excuses. Capability has grown from regular process reviews, technology refreshes, and the discipline to reject shipments or internal batches that fail to rise above the baseline.
Over time, our business has grown in step with customer success. We view every review and return as a chance for a sharper, more reliable product. Years spent troubleshooting tanks, managing a plant through seasonal humidity, or untangling raw material hiccups carry lessons that no generic brokering operation can match. The fact that technical customers return to source directly means more than a line in a sales report; it signals real trust earned through consistency, clarity, and results.
Dimethylaminophenyldimethylpyrazolone produced under our guidance is more than a commodity. It reflects an ongoing commitment to solution-focused manufacturing—where knowledge runs deep, transparency guides changes, and adaptability pays off in mutual advancement. Our team stands behind each batch that ships, aiming not just for another transaction but deeper reliability, expertise, and value for partners who rely on us.