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Polyvinyl chloride Terms Links

In terms of tonnage the bulk of plastics produced are thermoplastics, a group which includes polyethylene, polyvinyl chloride (p.v.c.), the nylons, polycarbonates and cellulose acetate. There is however a second class of materials, the thermosetting plastics. They are supplied by the manufacturer either as long-chain molecules, similar to a typical thermoplastic molecule or as rather small branched molecules. They are shaped and then subjected to either heat or chemical reaction, or both, in such a way that the molecules link one with another to form a cross-linked network (Fig. 18.6). As the molecules are now interconnected they can no longer slide extensively one past the other and the material has set, cured or cross linked. Plastics materials behaving in this way are spoken of as thermosetting plastics, a term which is now used to include those materials which can in fact cross link with suitable catalysts at room temperature. [Pg.916]

Plastics are one example. Scientists use the term plastic to refer to polymers, which are materials composed of a chain of bonded molecules. For instance, most credit cards are made from a plastic known as polyvinyl chloride (PVC), which consists of linked molecules of vinyl chloride. (Old vinyl record albums were often made from the same material.) The first plastic made entirely in the laboratory (as opposed to natural products) was Bakelite, concocted aroimd 1908 by the Belgian-American chemist Leo Baekeland (1863-1944). [Pg.15]

However some non-rubber compounds are also called elastomers if they exhibit a nondeforming elastic property similar to rubber at room temperature, even if the compound is relatively hard. The two main groups of non-rubber elastomers are thermoplastics, e.g., polyvinyl chloride, polypropylene and thermosets, e.g., ethylene propylene rubber, cross-linked polyethylene. These two groups are also covered by the term plastic . [Pg.187]


See other pages where Polyvinyl chloride Terms Links is mentioned: [Pg.3260]    [Pg.709]    [Pg.773]   


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