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Polymer Applications of Renewable-Resource Materials

✍ Scribed by L. H. Sperling, Charles E. Carraher Jr. (auth.), Charles E. Carraher Jr., L. H. Sperling (eds.)


Publisher
Springer US
Year
1983
Tongue
English
Leaves
469
Series
Polymer Science and Technology 17
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


For there is hope of a tree, If it be cut down, That it will sprout again And that the tender branch Thereof will not cease. Job XIV (7) Mankind has been blessed with a multitude of resources. In the beginning he utilized almost soley replenishable items such as vegetation and animal protein, for both nourishment and shelter. Gradually, such metals as copper and iron were developed and replaced wood as a material of construction. Cement and glass, although more plentiful than other minerals, also replaced the use of growing subΒ­ stances. Coal and oil became the primary sources of heat and power. Closer to the focus of this book, petroleum products began to replace the vegetable oils, tannin, wool, cotton, leather, silk, rubber, etc. in a host of applications. Surely, it was argued, the new materials did the job better and cheaper. What they didn't say is that soon we would run out of oil. In any case, research on growing natural products, now called renewable resources, slowed, and these industries sought only to maintain their status quo. The 20th Century saw an unprecedented emphasis and dependence on nonrenewable resources as energy sources (petroleum, coal, uraΒ­ nium) and the fabric of technology (drugs, clothing, shelter, tires, computer parts). The predawn of the 21st Century brings a realiΒ­ zation that a cyclic shift back towards the use of renewable reΒ­ sources for technological application is in order.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages i-xiii
Renewable Resource Monomers and Polymers....Pages 1-26
Renewable Resources for Industrial Applications an Historical Perspective....Pages 27-40
Enhancing the use of Cellulose by Solutions in DMSO and DMAc....Pages 41-44
Modification of Dextran Through Reaction With Organostannane Halides as a Function of Reaction System - A Model for Polysaccharide Modification....Pages 45-58
Starch- g -Poly(Methyl Acrylate)β•ŒEffects of Graft Level and Molecular Weight on Tensile Strength....Pages 59-71
Bagasse-Rubber Composite Technology....Pages 73-87
Chemistry and Technology of In-Situ Generated Resin Bonded Bagasse Composite Materials....Pages 89-101
Structural Identification of the Condensation Product of Sucrose With Organostannane Dihalides....Pages 103-112
Modified Lignan Polymers from the Resin of ParanΓ‘ Pine Tree Knots....Pages 113-128
Renewable Resources from Forest Products for High Temperature Resistant Polymers....Pages 129-147
Lignocellulose-Polymer Composites II....Pages 149-168
Fast Curing Copolymer Resins of Phenol, Formaldehyde, and Chemicals from Forest and Agricultural Residues....Pages 169-191
Organic Fillers for Thermoplastics....Pages 193-211
Crystallization of Gutta Percha Networks and Associated Elasticity....Pages 213-223
Japanese Lacquer-A Super Durable Coating (Proposed Structure and Expanded Application)....Pages 225-248
Simultaneous Interpenetrating Networks from Epoxidized Triglyceride Oils: Morphology and Mechanical Behavior....Pages 249-271
Vernonia Oil Characterization and Polymerication, and Simultaneous Interpenetrating Polymer Networks Based on Vernonia Oil-Sebacic Acid/Polystyrene-DVB Compositions....Pages 273-288
Monomer Reactivity Ratios of Tung Oil and Styrene in Copolymerization....Pages 289-302
Processing Emulsified Oils and Alkyds to Generate Polymers....Pages 303-322
Novel UV and Radiation Polymerisation Methods for Modifying Polyolefins, Cellulose and Leather....Pages 323-345
Syntheses and Properties of Chemically Modified POLY(Ξ³ -Methyl-L- Glutamate) Membranes....Pages 347-359
Modified Fibers from Regenerated Collagen....Pages 361-373
Relation between the Structure of Wool Graft Copolymers and their Dynamical Mechanical Properties....Pages 375-406
Polymer-Leather Composites V. Preparative Methods, Kinetics, Morphology, and Mechanical Properties of Selected Acrylate Polymer-Leather Composite Materials....Pages 407-452
Effect of Chain Transfer Agents During Graft Polymerization in Leathers....Pages 453-458
Back Matter....Pages 459-469

✦ Subjects


Physics, general


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