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Polyolefins polychloroprene

If polypropylene is too hard for the purpose envisaged, then the user should consider, progressively, polyethylene, ethylene-vinyl acetate and plasticised PVC. If more rubberiness is required, then a vulcanising rubber such as natural rubber or SBR or a thermoplastic polyolefin elastomer may be considered. If the material requires to be rubbery and oil and/or heat resistant, vulcanising rubbers such as the polychloroprenes, nitrile rubbers, acrylic rubbers or hydrin rubbers or a thermoplastic elastomer such as a thermoplastic polyester elastomer, thermoplastic polyurethane elastomer or thermoplastic polyamide elastomer may be considered. Where it is important that the elastomer remain rubbery at very low temperatures, then NR, SBR, BR or TPO rubbers may be considered where oil resistance is not a consideration. If, however, oil resistance is important, a polypropylene oxide or hydrin rubber may be preferred. Where a wide temperature service range is paramount, a silicone rubber may be indicated. The selection of rubbery materials has been dealt with by the author elsewhere. ... [Pg.896]

Haslam et al. [32] reported the determination of Al in polyolefins by AAS. Typical AAS tests on rubber compounds involve several steps. The sample is combusted, and the resulting ash is dissolved in distilled de-ionised water. The solution is then used for AAS [126]. AAS or EDS can also be used for element analysis of filler particles. In order to determine the uniformity of tin compounds in polychloroprene after milling and pressing, Hornsby et al. [127] have ashed various pieces from one composition. After fusion of the residue with sodium peroxide and dissolution in HC1, the Sn content was determined by means of AAS. Typical industrial AAS measurements concern the determination of Ca in Ca stearate, Zn in Zn stearate, Ca- and Zn stearate in PE, Ca and Ti in PE film or Al and V in rubbers. [Pg.612]

The first truly synthetic resin was developed by Baekeland in 1911 (phenol-formaldehyde). This was soon followed by a petroleum-derived product called coumarone-indene, which did indeed have the properties of a resin. The first synthetic elastomer was polychloroprene (1931) originated by Nieuwland and later called neoprene. Since then many new types of synthetic polymers have been synthesized, perhaps the most sophisticated of which are nylon and its congeners (polyamides, by Carothers), and the inorganic silicone group (Kipping). Other important types are alkyds, acrylics, aminoplasts, polyvinyl halides, polyester, epoxies, and polyolefins. [Pg.1083]

It is proposed that this is due to attack of carbonyl oxides, in their biradical form, on the rubber double bonds. Typical diene rubbers (polyisoprene and polybutadiene) have rate constants several orders of magnitude greater than polymers having a saturated backbone (polyolefins). Other unsaturated elastomers having high reaction rates with ozone include styrene-butadiene (SBR) and acrylonitrile-butadiene (NBR) rubbers. As an example, Polychloroprene (CR) is less reactive than other diene rubbers, and it is therefore inherently more resistant to attack by ozone. [Pg.198]

In the hot-melt type, two principal polymer types are used polyolefin and ethylene co-polymer based and polyester and polyamide type. In the solvent-based type, the most prominent are neoprene (polychloroprene)-based solvent and latex types, and polyvinyl acetate emulsions. For pressure-sensitive adhesives, the most favored are acrylic adhesives and butyl rubber/polyisobutylene types. [Pg.38]

Examples of vulcanizable elastomers include natural rubber (NR), styrene butadiene rubber (SBR), butadiene rubber (BR), ethylene-propylene-diene monomer-rubber (EPDM), butyl rubber (HR), polychloroprene or neoprene (CR), epichlorohydrin rubber (ECO), polyacrylate rubber (ACM), millable polyurethane rubber, silicone rubber, and flu-oroelastomers. Examples of thermoplastic elastomers include thermoplastic polyurethane elastomers, styrenic thermoplastic elastomers, polyolefin-based thermoplastic elastomers, thermoplastic polyether-ester (copolyester) elastomers, and thermoplastic elastomers based on polyamides. [Pg.204]

Some specific recent applications of the chromatography-mass spectrometry technique to various types of polymers include the following PE [130, 131], poly(l-octene), poly(l-decene), poly(l-dodecene) and 1-octene-l-decene-l-dodecene terpolymer [132], chlorinated polyethylene [133], polyolefins [134,135], acrylic acid, methacrylic acid copolymers [136, 137], polyacrylate [138], styrene-butadiene and other rubbers [139-141], nitrile rubber [142], natural rubbers [143,144], chlorinated natural rubber [145,146], polychloroprene [147], PVC [148-150], silicones [151,152], polycarbonates (PC) [153], styrene-isoprene copolymers [154], substituted PS [155], polypropylene carbonate [156], ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer [157], Nylon 6,6 [158], polyisopropenyl cyclohexane-a-methylstyrene copolymers [195], cresol-novolac epoxy resins [160], polymeric flame retardants [161], poly(4-N-alkylstyrenes) [162], pol)winyl pyrrolidone [31,163], vinyl pyrrolidone-methacryloxysilicone copolymers [164], polybutylcyanoacrylate [165], polysulfide copolymers [1669], poly(diethyl-2-methacryloxy) ethyl phosphate [167, 168], ethane-carbon monoxide copolymers [169], polyetherimide [170], and bisphenol-A [171]. [Pg.125]

Polymers such as poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC), ethylene-propylene-diene monomer (EPDM), chlorosulfonated polyethylene, ketone ethylene ester (KEE), reinforced polyurethane, butyl rubbers, and polychloroprene (neoprene) have proven to be suitable for roofing membranes.In the last ten years, a new synthetic roofing material (thermoplastic polyolefins)... [Pg.613]

Polyolefins and chlorine-containing polymers were investigated to produce polymer nanocomposites. Natural and oiganic-treated montmorillonite clays were melt compounded with the polymers. Oiganic-treated montmorillonite clay dispersed well in polychloroprene, chlorinated-polyethylene, polyvinyl chloride, chlorinated-... [Pg.48]


See other pages where Polyolefins polychloroprene is mentioned: [Pg.296]    [Pg.1438]    [Pg.327]    [Pg.492]    [Pg.327]    [Pg.92]    [Pg.13]   


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