Big Chemical Encyclopedia

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

Articles Figures Tables About

Semisynthetic polymers, commercial

Then came several semisynthetic polymers, which were natural polymers modified in some way. One of the first to attain commercial importance was cellulose nitrate plasticized with camphor, popular around 1885 for stiff collars and cuffs as celluloid, later most notably used in Thomas Edison s motion picture film (11). Cellulose nitrates were also sold as lacquers, used to coat wooden staircases, and so on. The problem was the terrible fire hazard existing with the nitrates, which were later replaced by the acetates. [Pg.20]

Natural and semisynthetic polymers have some commercial advantages over many... [Pg.6]

Semisynthetic and synthetic fibers introduced from the 1920s made new demands on the ingenuity of dye-makers. The commercial value of new polymers relied entirely on the ease of coloration. Normal dyeing is accomplished in aqueous solution, often in the presence of a fixing agent, or mordant. This is ideal for cotton, silk and wool, but not for synthetic fibers such as nylon and polyester, that are plastic in nature. They require... [Pg.65]

We learned much from nature with these early attempts to produce useful polymer products based on modified, or reconstituted ( semisynthetic ) natural polymers, and many of these processes are still in use today. The first of the purely synthetic commercial polymers came with the small-scale introduction of Bakelite in 1907. This phenol-formaldehyde resin product was developed by Leon Baekeland. It rapidly became a commercial reality with the formation of The General Bakelite Company by Baekeland, and construction of a larger plant at Perth Amboy, New Jersey, in 1910. At about this time styrene was being combined with dienes in the early commercialization of processes to produce synthetic rubber. Polystyrene itself was not a commercial product in Germany until 1930 and in the U.S.A. in 1937. The only other purely synthetic polymers that made a commercial appearance during this early development period were polyvinyl chloride and polyvinyl acetate, both in the early 1920s. [Pg.670]

The amounts of penicilloylated proteins in commercial benzylpenicillin and semisynthetic penicillins seem to vary considerably. Whereas up to 200-300 parts/ 10 of penicilloy 1-protein in benzylpenicillin preparations were reported by Batchelor et al. (1967) and also by Butcher and Stewart (1970), other groups have only detected less than 10 parts/10 of proteinaceous impurities in commercial benzylpenicillin (Dursch 1968 Preud homme and Lunel 1969 Weidenmuller and Ziegler 1970 Walsh et al. 1971 Ottens et al. 1971 Vilim et al. 1976). As described by Ottens et al. (1971), the methods used for the determinations, i.e., dialysis, membrane filtration, and gel filtration followed by penicilloyl and protein analysis, have several drawbacks. Penicillin degradation products and polymers were found to influence the determinations, making these somewhat unreliable. [Pg.40]

Hypromellose or hydroxypropylmethylcellulose (HPMC) is a semisynthetic, inert, viscoelastic polymer, which is used as an ophthalmic lubricant, an excipient and controlled delivery component in oral medicaments and is found in a variety of commercial products [111]. Hypromellose is used as an alternative to animal gelatin and as an emulsifier, thickener, and suspending agent. [Pg.437]


See other pages where Semisynthetic polymers, commercial is mentioned: [Pg.280]    [Pg.522]    [Pg.1508]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.153]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.3]   


SEARCH



Commercial polymers

Polymer commercialization

Polymers semisynthetic

Semisynthetic

Semisynthetics

© 2024 chempedia.info