MEK- ▸ Coatings: Solvent and viscosity control for paints, lacquers, and varnishes
- ▸ Adhesives and inks: Solvent and carrier for contact cements, glues, and printing inks
- ▸ Resin processing: Solvent for cellulose esters and synthetic resins
- ▸ Cleaning and degreasing: Removes adhesives, overspray, and oily soils
- ▸ Dewaxing and extraction: Lube-oil dewaxing and extraction of waxes, fats, and resins
- ▸ MEKP precursor: Feedstock for methyl ethyl ketone peroxide
A grade-specific Safety Data Sheet (SDS) — with the complete hazard classification, handling precautions, and transport information — is supplied with every shipment and available on request. Confirm all safety and regulatory details against the SDS for your specific grade.
Request SDS →Transport classification per the UN Model Regulations / 49 CFR 172.101 Hazardous Materials Table. Confirm against the grade-specific SDS (Section 14) before shipping.
Methyl ethyl ketone (CAS 78-93-3, butanone, often shortened to MEK) is a fast-evaporating ketone solvent prized for its aggressive solvency and clean flash-off. It dissolves a broad slate of resins, gums, cellulose esters, and rubbers, then leaves the film quickly with minimal residue. That combination — strong cut, controlled evaporation, low odor retention — is why formulators reach for MEK across coatings, adhesives, inks, and resin processing. RawSource sources MEK in bulk for industrial and manufacturing buyers.
MEK applications by sector
MEK earns its place in a formulation for two reasons: it cuts high-solids resin systems that weaker solvents leave gummy, and its evaporation rate (roughly 3.8x that of n-butyl acetate) sets a predictable working window. Below are the sectors where it does the most work.
Coatings, paints, lacquers and varnishes
This is MEK’s largest home. It dissolves acrylics, vinyls, epoxies, polyurethanes, and nitrocellulose, and it is a workhorse in high-solids coatings where a strong active solvent lets formulators carry more resin at lower total VOC. Coatings chemists use it as the primary solvent and as a viscosity-reduction tool — a measured addition drops application viscosity for spray or roll without slashing solids. The fast, even flash-off helps film leveling and reduces blush and pinholing on production lines.
Adhesives and contact cement
MEK dissolves the base polymers in rubber-based industrial cements, contact adhesives, and polyurethane adhesives while holding the right application viscosity. Its quick evaporation lets a bond reach tack and set on a line cadence rather than waiting on a slow-drying carrier. It is also a common surface prep and cleaning solvent immediately before bonding plastics and laminates.
Printing inks
In flexographic and gravure inks, MEK is a key solvent and carrier — it sets viscosity, dissolves the resin vehicle, and flashes off fast enough to keep press speeds high on film and foil substrates. Good resin compatibility and a clean evaporation profile keep dot and density consistent across a run.
Industrial cleaning and degreasing
The same strong solvency that dissolves resins makes MEK an effective degreaser and parts cleaner for removing uncured adhesives, coating overspray, and oily soils from metal and tooling. The fast flash-off means surfaces dry quickly with little residue before the next process step.
Plastics, PVC, resin processing and dewaxing
MEK is a process solvent in resin and synthetic-leather manufacture and a solvent for cellulose acetate and nitrate. In petroleum refining it is the working medium for MEK lube-oil dewaxing, where it chills and precipitates wax out of base oils, and it serves more broadly as an extraction medium for waxes, fats, oils, and resins.
MEK peroxide precursor and specialty coatings
MEK is the feedstock for methyl ethyl ketone peroxide (MEKP), the catalyst used to cure unsaturated polyester and vinyl-ester resins in fiberglass and composites. It also has a long history as a solvent in magnetic-tape and specialty functional coatings, where a clean, fast-drying carrier is required.
Grades and specification context
MEK is supplied to ASTM D740, which recognizes two types: Type I regular grade and Type II urethane grade. The practical difference is water content and trace impurities. Urethane-grade MEK is held to a tighter water spec because moisture interferes with isocyanate chemistry — even small amounts can scavenge isocyanate and disrupt polyurethane cure. For most coatings, adhesives, and ink work, a standard industrial grade is the right call; specify urethane grade when the resin system is moisture-sensitive. When you request a quote, share your target purity, water-content limit, and any color or non-volatile-matter constraints so the supply can be matched to your formulation rather than over- or under-specified.
Handling and safety
MEK is a highly flammable liquid (UN 1193) with a flash point well below room temperature and a low autoignition margin, so it demands grounded, vapor-controlled handling, bonded transfer, and ignition-source control. It is an eye, skin, and respiratory irritant and can cause drowsiness or dizziness at high vapor concentrations, which makes ventilation and appropriate PPE non-negotiable. None of this is unusual for an industrial ketone solvent, but it does govern how you store and dispense it. The Safety Data Sheet is the controlling document for classification, exposure limits, and handling — a current SDS ships with every order, and it, not this page, governs your site procedures.
Source MEK in bulk from RawSource
RawSource sources methyl ethyl ketone (MEK, CAS 78-93-3) in bulk for coatings, adhesive, ink, and resin manufacturers — drums, totes, and bulk quantities, with a CoA and SDS per shipment. Tell us your grade, packaging, target volume, and delivery location and we will quote current pricing and lead time. Request a bulk quote.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is methyl ethyl ketone used for?
MEK (CAS 78-93-3, butanone) is a fast-evaporating ketone solvent used primarily in surface coatings, paints, lacquers and varnishes; in adhesives, contact cements, and printing inks; for industrial cleaning and degreasing; and as a process solvent for cellulose esters, resins, and synthetic leather. It is also the precursor to MEK peroxide (MEKP) and the medium for lube-oil dewaxing. RawSource supplies it in bulk for coating, ink, adhesive, and resin manufacturing.
Is MEK the same as acetone?
No. MEK is methyl ethyl ketone (butanone, C4H8O); acetone is dimethyl ketone (propanone, C3H6O). Both are oxygenated ketone solvents, but MEK has a higher boiling point and slower evaporation rate, which gives coatings and adhesives formulators a longer, more controllable working window than acetone.
What grades of MEK are available?
MEK is supplied to ASTM D740 in two types: Type I regular (industrial) grade and Type II urethane grade. The main difference is water content — urethane grade carries a tighter moisture limit because water interferes with isocyanate cure in polyurethane systems. Standard industrial grade suits most coatings, ink, and adhesive work; specify urethane grade for moisture-sensitive resin chemistries.
What is another name for methyl ethyl ketone?
It is also known as butanone, 2-butanone, ethyl methyl ketone, or MEK. The CAS number is 78-93-3 and the HS code is 2914.12.
How is MEK shipped and classified for transport?
MEK is a flammable liquid, UN 1193, and ships under the corresponding DOT/IMDG flammable-liquid requirements. RawSource supplies it in drums, totes, and bulk with a CoA and SDS per shipment; consult the SDS for handling and GHS classification details.
What is the cost of bulk methyl ethyl ketone?
Bulk MEK pricing depends on volume, packaging (drums, totes, or bulk), grade, and freight. Request a bulk quote from RawSource with your target quantity, grade, and delivery location for current pricing and lead time.