Japan wax

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Japan wax (木蝋 Mokurō), also known as sumac wax, sumach wax, vegetable wax, China green tallow, and Japan tallow, is a pale-yellow, waxy, water-insoluble solid with a gummy feel, obtained from the berries of certain sumacs native to Japan and China, such as Toxicodendron vernicifluum (lacquer tree) and Toxicodendron succedaneum (Japanese wax tree).[1]

Japan wax is a byproduct of

palmitin.[1] Japan wax is sold in flat squares or disks and has a rancid odor. It is extracted by expression and heat, or by the action of solvents
.

Uses

Japan wax is used in candles, furniture polishes, floor waxes, wax matches, soaps, food packaging, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, pastels, crayons, buffing compounds, metal lubricants, adhesives, thermoplastic resins, and as a substitute for beeswax. Because it undergoes rancidification, it is seldom used in foods.

Properties

References

  1. ^
  2. ^ 長崎新聞 (2018-10-28). "伝統産業 木蝋 こだわりの製法貫く | 長崎新聞". 長崎新聞 (in Japanese). Retrieved 2019-10-22.
  3. ^ .