I think that toluene is a by-product in styrene manufacture. This may be the source of the benzaldehyde, if you have any toluene in your styrene?
Styrene industrial grade typically is like 99,5% +
mostly it is made from ethylbenzene via cat. dehydration, and the ethylbenzene is made from benzene and ethylene
no major source for typically up to 5% benzaldehyde (from toluene) here
a typical analysis of industrial grade styrene will show like 0.02% benzaldehyde
http://www.lookchem.com/Product_1967917/CasNo_100-42-5/Styrene.html#.UdLpSdhGQgk there should be a real pathway from styrene to benzaldehyde: this is
not coming from impurities
@ curiouscat :
70°C with 30% H
2O
2 looks pretty harsh to me on the H
2O
2maybe this is enough to provoke (minor) thermal decomposition already: H
2O
2 H
2O + O
.with molecular oxygen around, this might rearrange to form ozone, which then will split the styrene
to test for this theory, you might wish to either lower temperature or work with protective gas, and see if reduction of temperature (less oxygen-radicals) or reduction of elementary oxygen will reduce the typical amount of benzaldehyde thereby
regards
Ingo