reinforced plastic
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materials science
- In plastic: Reinforcements
Reinforcements, as the name suggests, are used to enhance the mechanical properties of a plastic. Finely divided silica, carbon black, talc, mica, and calcium carbonate, as well as short fibres of a variety of materials, can be incorporated as particulate fillers. (The use of…
Read More - In plastic: Fibre reinforcement
The term polymer-matrix composite is applied to a number of plastic-based materials in which several phases are present. It is often used to describe systems in which a continuous phase (the matrix) is polymeric and another phase (the reinforcement) has at least one…
Read More - In materials science: Plastics and composites
…form and shape of the reinforcements vary greatly, depending on many factors. The most effective reinforcements are long fibres, which are employed either in the form of a woven cloth or as separate layers of unidirectional fibres stacked upon one another until the proper laminate thickness is achieved. The resin…
Read More - In materials science: Polymer-matrix composites
A variety of reinforcements can be used with both thermoset and thermoplastic PMCs, including particles, whiskers (very fine single crystals), discontinuous (short) fibres, continuous fibres, and textile preforms (made by braiding, weaving, or knitting fibres together in specified designs). Continuous fibres are more efficient at resisting loads than…
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naval architecture
- In naval architecture: Materials of construction
Plastics reinforced with glass fibre eliminate many of the joints in a boat and greatly decrease the deterioration encountered in wooden or metal hulls. They may be coloured with pigment and they lend themselves admirably to “sticking in” stiffening members and other parts and to…
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