BAKELITE

bāˈkəlīt [for its inventor, L. H. Baekeland], synthetic thermosetting resin. It has been widely used both alone, to form whole objects, and in combination with other materials, as a laminate or a surface coating. It was used as a substitute for hard rubber, amber, or celluloid; for insulating electrical apparatus (since it is a nonconductor); and for the manufacture of certain machinery gears, phonograph records, and many other articles useful and ornamental and as diverse in character as buttons, billiard balls, pipestems, and umbrella handles. Bakelite is a condensation polymer of formaldehyde and phenol. In practice, the phenol and formaldehyde are first polymerized to a small extent by using the proper choice of catalyst and temperature. The resulting prepolymer, called a resol, is a low-melting, soluble material, which can then be combined with a filler (usually cotton linters or wood fibers) and a pigment and heated under pressure in a mold to yield an object of the desired shape. The pure resin is colorless or amber-colored and very brittle; the various fillers and other additives give it the desired properties depending on its application. Heating of the prepolymer results in extensive cross-links between the polymer chains, resulting in a tightly bound three-dimensional network. A Bakelite-type resin can also be formed using furfural in place of the formaldehyde.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Bakelite
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books on: Bakelite  - 296 results

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...opposite of green core . See core sand. Bakelite Plastics . Trade-name for synthetic resin...phenol with formaldehyde. First product is Bakelite A , a liquid; this is changed by heat into Bakelite B , which is a solid that is soft when...
...photographic process and the synthetic plastic Bakelite. The son of an illiterate shoemaker...good thermosetting resin which he called Bakelite. It showed good electrical insulation...only drawback being its brittleness. Bakelite was an immediate success in the electrical...
...explanations have been extremely difficult to establish. Bakelite Often called the first commercial plastic, Bakelite was invented in 1904 but had been preceded by celluloid IV in 1868. Bakelite was the product of a Belgian-born chemist who became...
...thermosetting molding powder, whichnaturally he called bakelite. The General Bakelite Company,established in Perth Amboy, New Jersey...company, Redmanol Products, it changed its name to Bakelite Corporation in 1922. In 1931 itset up its plant...
...big way in the late 1920s; in 1927 the Bakelite patent expired and other manufacturers...came down and bright colors emerged. Bakelite had ordinarily been supplied in black...explained in 1939. The dark coloring in Bakelite was intended to disguise fillers that...
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journal articles on: Bakelite  - 25 results

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...faceted mirrors, glass brick walls, and bakelite floors, were not just stylistic hallmarks...interior of chrome, plate glass, and bakelite with ubiquitous "speed" lines decorating...chamber is completed by a high-gloss bakelite floor so reflective that it almost reads...
...had reason to be; for yours was an anxious time of nylon and bakelite, market-driven hysteria on every fretwork radio, your frantic...criticism. For example, the phrase "an anxious time of nylon and bakelite" is a shrewd ironic description of the burgeoning consumer...
...That means that shopping was invented for women!" Others noted that the 1940s style "looks like a juke box." The 1940 bakelite radio attracted the observation, "Why, when its plastic, have they made it look like mahogany?" One member of the group...
...of bits and pieces of wiring and circuitry I didnt understand-just bunged them together with glue, put them inside an old bakelite shell, and told Ray it was a radio transmitter, that Id re-wired the whole thing so that it would broadcast, if only we...
...milker (W.H. Merhing, Pat. 1899) that is in need of repair. Specifically, I have one set of teat cups and hoses, bakelite and glass, which are in rough shape, although all the pieces appear to be accounted for. I would like to put this milker...
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magazine articles on: Bakelite  - 55 results

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Bakelite 2.0 by Steven Kotler Forget Bakelite. The future is bioplastic. A recent survey conducted by the European Bioplastics Association found that the bioplastics market is growing by 20 percent a year - and thats good news on the environmental...
...frequently) hideously kitsch; monochrome or garish; chrome or Bakelite; tribal or futuristic; borrowing from a classical past or...Wedgwood mass produced porcelain figurines, industrially moulded Bakelite radios were manufactured in huge quantities. The exhibition...
...heated a resin of phenol and formaldehyde to make what he called Bakelite, later advertised as a "material of a thousand uses." Jewelry, telephones, and other items made from Bakelite are now antiques. Today, "plastic" is a generic word for...
...Phoenix asked Ecoplas to transfer the licensing agreement to Bakelite AG, a company to which Phoenix had sold assets. Ecoplas refused...Phoenix. The arbitrator concluded that Phoenixs asset sale to Bakelite did not terminate the licensing agreement and that Phoenix...
...final room, so as to bracket these works spatially, were two groups of film noir-ish telephones, rotary, black, and Bakelite--again, like card catalogue and carousel, old-fashioned and past. Picking up a phone, you heard Cardiffs voice recounting...
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newspaper articles on: Bakelite  - 284 results

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History Calling; Bakelite Telephones. Bakelite was the first commercially successful synthetic resin developed...a Belgian-American chemist, Dr Leo Hendrik Baekeland. Bakelite is a polymer of phenol and formaldehyde, often compounded...
Fantastic Plastic Bakelite Achieves Iconic Status. After the...not of gold or tortoiseshell - but of Bakelite and brass. In characteristic Deco...iconic status at the same exhibition. Bakelite had already been invented by a brilliant...
QIVE Had Two Old Bakelite ...; TREASURE HUNTERS. Byline: JAMIE BREESE QIVE had two old Bakelite telephones for a long time, but I want to sell...Gary Sobers in action Ring up the tills... Bakelite phone may fetch pounds 600
...Shrine to Pencils, a Teapot Museum, a Bakelite Collection. Byline: GWYNETH REES THE...interwar telephones, youll love the Bakelite Museum in Williton, Somerset.Housing...And, no, the caravans arent made of Bakelite. WHAT, NO STONE? IF STONEHENGE strikes...
TRULY,THE FIFTIES WERE FABULOUS; Bakelite,Brylcreem and Beehives. but despite Rationing and Austerity...Wimpy bars, of Sunday roasts with Yorkshire pudding; an age of Bakelite telephones with letters to dial the exchange, vans delivering...
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encyclopedia articles on: Bakelite  - 6 results

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BAKELITE ba k lit for its inventor, L. H. Baekeland...balls, pipestems, and umbrella handles. Bakelite is a condensation polymer of formaldehyde...bound three-dimensional network. A Bakelite-type resin can also be formed using...
...However, plastics did not come into modern industrial use until after the production (1909) of Bakelite by the American chemist L. H. Baekeland. Bakelite, made by the polymerization of phenol and formaldehyde, is thermosetting. New uses for plastics...
...paper of his own invention. In 1909 he announced his invention of Bakelite , the first important synthetic plastic, and from 1910 to 1939 he served as president of the Bakelite Corp. He wrote Some Aspects of Industrial Chemistry (1914...
...poisonous, colorless gas with a suffocating odor. Formaldehyde is used in the preparation of dyes, in the production of Bakelite and other plastics and synthetic resins, and for several other purposes. Pure gaseous formaldehyde is uncommon, since it...
...are found in the essential oils of certain plants. Aldehydes are used for the manufacture of synthetic resins, e.g., bakelite, and for making dyestuffs, flavorings, perfumes, and other chemicals. Some are used as preservatives and disinfectants...
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