Benzonitrile, 4-Amino-3-Methoxy-, with HS Code 2926909090, stands out in laboratories and factories across the globe. In my years working around chemical procurement, I’ve seen the market move fast on demand for high-purity aromatic nitriles, especially when it comes to advanced pharma and dye intermediates. This compound’s structure—C8H8N2O—makes it valuable for synthesis routes needing both amino and methoxy groups.
This chemical isn’t just about a CAS number or a molecular formula. People ask about the molecular weight (148.16 g/mol), appearance (usually pale crystals or powder), and specific density (about 1.22 g/cm³). Practical buyers, especially from pharmaceuticals and materials sectors, want to know about the melting point (119-122°C) because lab work depends on reliable physical specs. Knowing the formula helps chemists plan for solution concentrations or pilot batches. The MSDS and SDS guide safe handling, highlighting harmful and hazardous potential—essential for every warehouse manager or QC supervisor getting their hands dirty with raw materials.
It’s no secret that many global buyers look to China for Benzonitrile, 4-Amino-3-Methoxy-. Local manufacturers in cities like Shanghai or Shandong have established themselves not only as cheap sources but with real QC systems. Most plants offer ISO and SGS certifications, even stretching toward REACH pre-registration for European clients. OEM and private labels aren’t a special favor—they’re often standard process. I’ve visited some of these factories. They take pride in stamped halal and kosher certificates. They don’t just blend and pack—they own their consistency, traceability, and price advantage. Buyers want CIF or FOB quotes upfront, and Chinese teams handle both with firm minimum order quantities (MOQ), usually just 1kg or 1L for trial orders. Real negotiation starts on the ground, not online forms.
Procurement folks care about more than price. They want TDS, purity (98%+ GC), and solutions for safe storage and transport. Raw material origin, manufacturing flow, and trace residues—these questions come up every week for any Chinese supplier aiming at Europe or the Americas. Samples help, especially when they’re free, but you want a supplier willing to answer doubts about hazardous transport classification or provide full packing details. Is it packed in 25kg fiber drums, plastic lining, or 200L barrel solutions for larger scale? These aren’t minor details in the business world. I’ve seen deals hinge on nothing more than prompt replies about lead time and secure shipping.
Responsible chemical trade means more than just ticking boxes on MSDS or GHS labels. Factories give clients SDS documents, share TDS in English, and explain handling in plain terms—spill response, PPE requirements, even insurance policies for shipments. Halal, kosher, and other certificates are demanded by buyers with strict end-product requirements. Every buyer and supplier I know wants full traceability. Without it, bigger companies walk away, even from cheap deals. Good technical support and flexible MOQ terms help smaller or first-time buyers jump in with confidence.
Policy in China evolved rapidly as chemical safety took center stage. Registration under REACH and local environmental controls started to reshape how suppliers run their plants. Only factories with clear compliance attract long-term foreign partners. New buyers pay attention to news about raw material supply, price swings, and changing export regulations in real time. In my own practice, staying in touch with suppliers’ policy shifts prevents nasty shipping surprises and wasted purchase orders. Markets reward reliability and safety, especially as more global companies ask for eco-friendly and certified supply chains.