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Plastic closures

Place a small, zipper-closure plastic bag on the pan of a zeroed balance. Wearing gloves and using tongs, insert a 20- to 30-g piece of dry ice into the bag. [Pg.375]

Closures, plastics Clothes hangers, plastics Clothespins, plastics Combs, plastics Composition stone, plastics Containers, plastics except foam, bottles, and bags Corrugulated panels, plastics... [Pg.491]

Laser marking additive cleared for caps and closures. Plastics Addit Compound [trade journal—Elsevier Ltd.] fanuary/Febmary 2008. [Pg.259]

Figure 4. (left to right) Polyolefin linerless beverage closures, plastic bottles with special decorative pearlescent effects, and Nylon/Urethane animal tag identification. The calf shown Obadiah is courtesy of Pepperstown House, Ardee Ireland... [Pg.879]

The General Tests and Assays. This section of the USP gives methods for tests that are general in nature and apply to a number of the substances. Procedures are iacluded for such tests as heavy metals, melting point, chloride, sulfate, sterility, bacterial endotoxins, and pyrogens. Also iacluded are descriptions of various analytical techniques, such as spectrophotometry, chromatography, and nmr, and descriptions of tests to be used on glass or plastic containers, mbber closures, etc. [Pg.445]

Bis(benZoxaZol-2-yl) Derivatives. Bis(benzoxazol-2-yl) derivatives (8) (Table 3) aie prepared in most cases by treatment of dicaiboxyhc acid derivatives of the central nucleus, eg, stilbene-4,4Cdicarboxyhc acid, naphthalene-l,4-dicarboxyhc acid, thiophene-2,5-dicarboxyhc acid, etc, with 2 moles of an appropriately substituted o-aminophenol, followed by a ring-closure reaction. These compounds are suitable for the brightening of plastics and synthetic fibers. [Pg.116]

Attempts have been made to perform thermal retorting ia a gas barrier flexible pouch or tray. The retort pouch, under development for many years, has a higher surface-to-volume ratio than a can and employs a heat seal rather than a mechanical closure. Similarly, plastic retort trays have higher surface-to-volume ratios and are usually heat seal closed. Plastic cans iatended for microwave reheating are composed of bodies fabricated from multilayer plastic including a high oxygen barrier material, plus double-seam aluminum closures. [Pg.449]

Injection Molding. Matched metal molds are used in the fabrication of plastic closures, specialty packages, and botde preforms. In conventional injection mol ding the plastic resin is melted in an extmder which forces a measured quantity or shot into a precision-machined chilled mold after which the nozzle of the extmder is withdrawn. [Pg.453]

Insert injection mol ding is used to manufacture snap closures for yogurt and ice cream cups and tubs and for breakfast cereal cans. In insert injection mol ding, a die-cut printed paperboard or other flat material is placed in the mold. The plastic is extmded around the insert to form a precision skeletal stmcture. [Pg.454]

Barium carbonate of finely controlled particle size reacts in the soHd state when heated with iron oxide to form barium ferrites. Magnetically aligned barium ferrite [11138-11-7] powder can be pressed and sintered into a hard-core permanent magnet which is used in many types of small motors. Alternatively, ground up magnetic powder can be compounded into plastic strips which are used in a variety of appHances as part of the closure mechanism. [Pg.480]

Glass or plastic bottles that have plastic or aluminum closures are tested for removal torque. The removal torque represents the force required to remove the closure from the bottle. Closures are also evaluated to ensure that they have been properly appHed and that they are tamper evident. Crown closures are also evaluated to ensure proper appHcation. [Pg.16]

Toriumi, D.M., O Grady, K., Devang, D. and Bagal, A., Use of oclyl-2-cyanoacrylale for skin closure in facial plastic surgery. PLasl. Reconstruct. Surg., 102, 2209-2219 (1998). [Pg.1127]

Bottle caps made from different plastics are extensively used. Some closures are of the simple cork snap type design, but most are of the screw type. Strong, accurate threads can be molded, which represent undercuts. Simple designs should be used when permitted, such as wide-pitch threads. The thread should be designed to start about 1 /32 in. (0.08 cm) from the end of the face perpendicular to the axis of the thread. It is usually practical to mold up to 32 threads per in. more than this number can give certain molders trouble. [Pg.191]

Speas, C. A., Closure Performance Requirements for High Barrier Plastics... [Pg.67]

Closure liners of pulpboard or cork, unless specially treated with a preservative, foil or wax coating, are often a source of mould contamination for liquid or semi-solid products. A closure with a plastic flowed-in linear is less prone to introduce or support microbial growth than one stuck in with an adhesive, particularly if the latter is based on a natural product such as casein. If required, closures can be sterilized by either formaldehyde or ethylene oxide gas. [Pg.348]

The use of plastics for containers, closures, and medical devices evolved steadily in the second half of the twentieth century. Plastics are durable, easily molded into a variety of shapes, flexible, often unbreakable, and biocompatable in many applications. [Pg.592]

Polyethylene and polystyrene are examples of plastics subject to environmental stress cracking. Crack resistance tests have shown that surfactants, alcohols, organic acids, vegetable and mineral oils, and ethers provide an active environment for stress cracking of polyethylene. Table 6 lists typical sterile devices and plastic materials used to fabricate them, while Tables 7-9 list the potential effects of sterilization processes on polymeric materials. The effect of gamma irradiation on elastomeric closures has been studied by the Parenteral Drug Association [15]. [Pg.594]

FIGURE 26.6 ASTM plasticity determination for fine-grained soils. (Adapted from U.S. EPA, Requirements for Hazardous Waste Landfill Design, Construction, and Closure, EPA/625/4-89/022, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Cincinnati, OH, August 1989.)... [Pg.1104]


See other pages where Plastic closures is mentioned: [Pg.1404]    [Pg.412]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.1404]    [Pg.412]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.225]    [Pg.454]    [Pg.461]    [Pg.421]    [Pg.512]    [Pg.321]    [Pg.570]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.1953]    [Pg.2326]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.654]    [Pg.1094]    [Pg.1112]    [Pg.998]    [Pg.1293]    [Pg.1294]    [Pg.857]    [Pg.639]    [Pg.555]    [Pg.183]    [Pg.221]    [Pg.418]    [Pg.395]    [Pg.592]    [Pg.281]    [Pg.414]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.217 ]




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