Nonmetallic Mineral Fillers In Plastics

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Robert D. Thomson
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
13
File Size:
1611 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1960

Abstract

The plastics industry runs into the billions, both in the dollar value of its finished, products and in the pounds of plastic raw material produced. It is, too, one of the fastest growing industries with a 300 percent increase in production in the past ten years. Informed estimates set 5.9 billions pounds as the plastic volume for 1959. Statistically, this is equivalent to a per capita consumption of 25 pounds in the United States. Plastics are man-made materials in contrast to natural materials like wood and are a family of materials -- not a single material - each member having special advantages. A generally accepted definition; for plastics is; a large and varied group of materials which consist, wholly or in part, of combinations of carbon with oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, and other organic and inorganic elements. This, while solid in the finished state, at some stage in its manufacture is soft enough to be formed into various shapes, most usually through the application either singly or together of heat and pressure. Many combinations and many different materials are thus possible. Therefore, for purposes of simplification, most plastics can be classified under one of 14 recognized basic family groups. These groups in turn generally can be further classified into one of two major subdivisions - thermosetting or thermoplastics. A few plastics are in between and they can be formulated to be either thermosetting or thermoplastic.
Citation

APA: Robert D. Thomson  (1960)  Nonmetallic Mineral Fillers In Plastics

MLA: Robert D. Thomson Nonmetallic Mineral Fillers In Plastics. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1960.

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