Nylatron

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Nylatron is a tradename for a family of nylon plastics, typically filled with molybdenum disulfide lubricant powder. It is used to cast plastic parts for machines, because of its mechanical properties and wear-resistance. [1]

Nylatron is a brand name of Mitsubishi Chemical Advanced Materials, Inc. and was originally developed and manufactured by Nippon Polypenco Limited. [2]

Nylatron is used in several applications such as:

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2
.

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Ethylene-vinyl acetate Chemical compound

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Titanium alloys are alloys that contain a mixture of titanium and other chemical elements. Such alloys have very high tensile strength and toughness. They are light in weight, have extraordinary corrosion resistance and the ability to withstand extreme temperatures. However, the high cost of both raw materials and processing limit their use to military applications, aircraft, spacecraft, bicycles, medical devices, jewelry, highly stressed components such as connecting rods on expensive sports cars and some premium sports equipment and consumer electronics.

Concrete slab

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Filler (materials)

Filler materials are particles added to resin or binders that can improve specific properties, make the product cheaper, or a mixture of both. The two largest segments for filler material use is elastomers and plastics. Worldwide, more than 53 million tons of fillers are used every year in application areas such as paper, plastics, rubber, paints, coatings, adhesives, and sealants. As such, fillers, produced by more than 700 companies, rank among the world's major raw materials and are contained in a variety of goods for daily consumer needs. The top filler materials used are ground calcium carbonate (GCC), precipitated calcium carbonate (PCC), kaolin, talc, and carbon black. Filler materials can affect the tensile strength, toughness, heat resistance, color, clarity etc. A good example of this is the addition of talc to polypropylene. Most of the filler materials used in plastics are mineral or glass based filler materials. Particulates and fibers are the main subgroups of filler materials. Particulates are small particles of filler which are mixed in the matrix where size and aspect ratio are important. Fibers are small circular strands that can be very long and have very high aspect ratios.

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X46Cr13 is the European Norm name for a common martensitic stainless steel with the numeric name 1.4034. It is equivalent to American Iron and Steel Institute standard 420C. It has the highest carbon content of the SAE 420 series.

References

  1. Stan, Felicia; Fetecau, Catalin (2012). "Characterization of viscoelastic properties of molybdenum disulphide filled polyamide by indentation". Mechanics of Time-Dependent Materials. 17 (2): 205. doi:10.1007/s11043-012-9198-5.
  2. Joyce, G. C; Rack, P. M. H (1969). "Isotonic lengthening and shortening movements of cat soleus muscle". The Journal of Physiology. 204 (2): 475. doi:10.1113/jphysiol.1969.sp008925. PMC   1351565 . PMID   5824648.
  3. Mostacci, Aldo (2006). "Materials: Plastic fantastic down under". Filtration & Separation. 43 (9): 36. doi:10.1016/S0015-1882(06)71011-4.