Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

High molecular weight nylon-polymer blends

A variety of polymers, both thermosets as well as thermoplastics, can be blended and coreacted with epoxy resins to provide for a specific set of desired properties. The most common of these are nitrile, phenolic, nylon, poly sulfide, and polyurethane resins. At high levels of additions these additives result in hybrid or alloyed systems with epoxy resins rather than just modifiers. They differ from reactive diluents in that they are higher-molecular weight-materials, are used at higher concentrations, and generally have less deleterious effect on the cured properties of the epoxy resin. [Pg.123]


See other pages where High molecular weight nylon-polymer blends is mentioned: [Pg.32]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.287]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.1974]    [Pg.508]    [Pg.613]    [Pg.593]    [Pg.323]    [Pg.122]    [Pg.476]    [Pg.593]    [Pg.441]    [Pg.3081]    [Pg.593]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.780]    [Pg.450]    [Pg.471]   


SEARCH



High molecular weight nylon-polymer

High molecular weight polymers

Nylon 6 polymers

Nylons blends

Polymer blends molecular weight

Polymer blends weight

Polymer high-molecular

Polymer weight

Polymers molecular weight

© 2024 chempedia.info