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Processing phenol-formaldehyde moulding powder

Phenol-formaldehyde (PF) was the first fully synthetic macromolecular material ( Bakelite , 1907). In a slightly precured condition and provided with fillers, it is, as a moulding powder, available for processing into end-use articles such as bulb fittings, switch housings, coils, laminated wood and foam for thermal insulation. [Pg.18]

Phenolic plastics. Collective designation for phenolic resin-based plastics. Phenolic resins are produced by condensation of phenol and/or its homologues, such as cresol, with an aldehyde, such as formaldehyde or with an aldehyde-releasing material such as hexamethylenetetramine. Phenol/formaldehyde and/or cresol/formaldehyde resins are used as binding materials in fibre board, laminated paper and fabrics. In phenolic moulding compounds, the proportion of filler (such as wood flour, rock flour, asbestos, stone powder, mica, glass fibre) can be equal to that of the resin. These thermosets can be processed by compression or injection moulding into black or dark-coloured products mainly for the electric industry. [Pg.18]

Injection Moulding. A process sometimes adopted for the shaping of non-plastic ceramics, e.g. alumina. A plasticizer such as polystyrene or phenol formaldehyde composition is mixed with the ceramic powder and the batch is then warmed and injected into the die. [Pg.166]


See other pages where Processing phenol-formaldehyde moulding powder is mentioned: [Pg.674]    [Pg.674]    [Pg.674]    [Pg.639]    [Pg.646]    [Pg.639]    [Pg.646]    [Pg.639]    [Pg.646]    [Pg.532]   


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Formaldehyde powder

Formaldehyde process

Moulding powders

Moulding processes

Moulds process

Phenol formaldehyd

Phenol process

Phenol-Formaldehyde (Phenolics)

Phenol-formaldehyde

Phenol-formaldehyde moulding powder

Phenol-formaldehyde mouldings

Phenolate process

Powder processes

Powders, processing

Processing moulding

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