Dystrybucja Tworzyw Sztucznych

Poza recyklingiem tworzyw sztucznych firma Heathland produkuje i dystrybuuje żywice termoplastyczne. Wiele z tych żywic dorównuje jakości żywic pierwotnych. Żywice te są oferowane w atrakcyjnych cenach, które mogą znacznie ograniczyć koszty produkcji naszych partnerów.

Poniżej znajduje się więcej informacji na temat typów żywic, które Heathland produkuje i dostarcza. Informacje dotyczące każdej żywicy z tworzywa sztucznego zostały zebrane z następujących źródeł: Chemical Economics Handbook, SRI International, Modern Plastics Encyclopedia, Whittington’s Dictionary of Plastics, The Codensed Chemical Dictionary, The SPI Plastics Engineering Handbook, The Story of the Plastics Industry (SPI).

ABS – Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene Resin

Chemically, this family of thermoplastics are called terpolymers, because they are made of three different monomers: acrylonitrile, butadiene and styrene, to create a single material that draws on the best properties of all three. ABS was introduced to the market in 1948, primarily as a result of activities that had taken place during the war years in the development of synthetic rubbers. ABS possesses outstanding impact strength and high mechanical strength, which makes it suitable for use in tough consumer and industrial products, including: appliances, automotive parts, pipe, business machines and telephone components. In the 1960s, ABS found wide outlet as a substrate for metalizing (i.e., applying a chrome-like metallic finish to the plastic) and appeared in such products as shower heads, door handles, faucet handles and automotive front grilles. A class of thermoplastic terpolymers including a range of resins, all prepared with usually more than 50% styrene [C6H5CHCH2] and varying amounts of acrylonitrile [CH2CHCN] and butadiene [CH2CHCHCH2]. The three components are combined by a variety of methods involving polymerization, graft copolymerization, physical mixtures and combinations thereof.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as ABS, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Alkyds – Alkyds Resin

This plastic was developed in 1926 and was promptly put to work in liquid form as enamels, paints, lacquers, and similar coatings for automobiles, refrigerators, stoves and similar products, still the largest use for alkyds. In 1948, however, an alkyd compound was introduced as a molding material for compression molding electrical applications like circuit breaker insulation, coal forms, capacitor and resistor encapsulation, cases, housings, and switchgear components. Major properties are in the electrical area where alkyd molding materials offer excellent dielectric strength. Alkyds also have excellent heat resistance and are dimensionally stable under high temperatures. Alkyds are thermosetting unsaturated polyester resins produced by reacting an organic alcohol with an organic acid, dissolved in and reacted with unsaturated monomers such as styrene [C6H5CHCH2], diallyl phthalate [C6H4(COOCH2CHCH2)2], diacetone acrylamide [CH3COCH2C(CH3)2CHCHCONH2] or vinyl toluene [CH2CHC6H4CH2]. Typical applications are electrical uses, automotive parts, and as coatings.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Alkyds, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Bio-based plastics – PHB & PLA

The first bio-based plastic, polyhydroxybutyrate (PHB), was originally discovered in 1926 by the French researcher, Maurice Lemoigne, from his work with the bacterium Bacillus megaterium. The significance of Lemoigne’s discovery was overlooked for several decades, largely because, at the time of discovery, petroleum was inexpensive and abundantly available.

The petroleum crisis of the mid-1970s brought renewed interest in finding alternatives to petroleum-based products.

The rise of molecular genetics and recombinant DNA technologies after that time further moved forward further research, so that by the year 2000 the structures, methods of production, and applications for numerous types of bio-based plastics became established.

Bio-based plastics that are in use include PHB and polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA), both of which are synthesized within specialized microbes, as well as polylactic acid (PLA), which is polymerized from lactic acid monomers produced by microbial fermentation of plant-derived sugars and starches. Especially PLA found it’s way into modern packaging materials and other applications. Bio-based plastics are starting to make up a significant portion of total world production of plastics. Commercial manufacturing processes are still rather expensive, but the need for an alternative to oil based plastics remains. Improvements in metabolic and genetic engineering have produced strains of microbes and plants that may significantly improve yields and production capabilities further while overall production costs are reduced. These USP’s for bio-based plastics, combined with increasing oil prices and growing environmental awareness, will greatly increase demand for bio-based plastics in coming decades.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as PLA, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Cellulosics – Cellulosics Resin

Cellulosics go back to the very start of the plastics indusry when John Wesley Hyatt created the first commercial U.S. plastic, cellulose nitrate, in 1868. Several other important members of the cellulosics family, each with its distinct properties, were introduced in the 1900s. Since then, cellulosics have been used to make knobs, appliance housings, handles, toys, packaging, consumer products, and automotive parts, among many other products. Cellulosics are thermoplastic resins manufactured by chemical modification of cellulose [(C6H10O5)n]. Included are: cellophane—regenerated cellulose made by mixing cellulose xanthate [ROCSSH] with a dilute sodium hydroxide [NaOH] solution to form a viscose, then extruding the viscose into an acid bath for regeneration; cellulose acetate—an acetic acid ester [CH3COOC2H5] of cellulose; cellulose acetate butyrate—a mixed ester produced by treating fibrous cellulose with butyric acid [CH3CH2CH2COOH], butyric anhydride [(CH3CH2CH2CO)2O], acetic acid [CH3COOH] and acetic anhydride [(CH3CO)2O] in the presence of sulfuric acid [H2SO4]; cellulose propionate— formed by treating fibrous cellulose with propionic acid [CH3CH2CO2H] and acetic acid and anhydrides in the presence of sulfuric acid; cellulose nitrate—made by treating fibrous cellulosic materials with a mixture of nitric [HNO3] and sulfuric acids.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Cellulosics, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Coumarone-Indene – Coumarone-Indene Resin

Thermoplastic resin obtained by heating mixtures of coumarone [C8H6O] and indene [C6H4CH2CHCH] with sulfuric acid [H2SO4] to promote polymerization. These resins have no commercial applications when used alone. They are used primarily as processing aids, extenders and plasticizers with other resins in asphalt floor tile.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Coumarone-Indene, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

DAP – Diallyl Phthalate Resin

The term DAP is used both for the monomeric and polymeric forms. The monomer [C6H4(COOCH2CHCH2)2] is used as a cross-linking agent in unsaturated polyester resins. As a polymer, it is used in the production of thermosetting molding powders, casting resins and laminates.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as DAP, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Epoxy – Epoxy Resin

Epoxies are used by the plastics industry in several ways. One is in combination with glass fibers (i.e., impregnating fibers with liquid epoxy resins) to produce high-strength composites or reinforced plastics that provide heightened strength, electrical and chemical properties, and heat resistance. Typical uses for epoxy-glass reinforced plastics are in aircraft components, filament wound rocket motor casings for missiles, pipes, tanks, pressure vessels and tooling jigs and fixtures. Epoxies are also used in the encapsulation or casting of various electrical and electronic components and in the powder coating of metal substrates. Major outlets for epoxies also include adhesives, protective coatings in appliances, industrial equipment, gymnasium floors, etc., and sealants. Epoxies are thermosetting resins that, in the uncured form, contain one or more reactive epoxide or oxirane groups. These epoxide groups serve as cross-linking points in the subsequent curing step, in which the uncured epoxy is reacted with a curing agent or hardener. Cross-linking is accomplished through the epoxide groups as well as through hydroxyl groups that may be present. Most conventional unmodified epoxy resins are produced from epichlorohydrin (chloropropylene oxide) [CH2OCHCH2Cl] and bisphenol A [(CH3)2C(C6H4OH)2]. The other types of epoxy resins are phenoxy resins, novolac resins, and cycloaliphatic resins.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Expoxy, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Fluoropolymer – Fluoropolymer Resin

Fluoropolymers are known for their inertness to most chemicals, resistance to high temperatures, extremely low coefficients of friction and excellent dielectric properties which are relatively insensitive to temperature and power frequency. Typical applications for fluoropolymers are electrical/ electronic uses and pipe and chemical processing equipment and non-stick coatings for cookware and other applications. Fluoropolymers make up a family of thermoplastic resins analogous to polyethylene in which some of the hydrogen atoms attached to the carbon chain are replaced by fluorine or fluorinated alkyl groups. In some cases, other halogens such as chlorine are also part of the molecule. The most common commercial fluoropolymers are: FEP (fluorinated ethylene-propylene) from tetrafluoroethylene [C2F4] and hexa-fluoropropylene [C3F6]; PTFE (polytetra fluoroethylene) from the polymerization of tetrafluoroethylene and ethylene [C2H4]; PFA (perfluoroalkoxy) from tetrafluoroethylene and perfluoropropyl vinyl ether [C3H7C4OF5]; PCTFE (polychlorotrifluoro-ethylene) from chlorotrifluoro-ethylene monomer [C2F3CI]; CTFE-VDF (polychlorotrifluoroethylenevinylidene fluoride) from chlorotrifluoroethylene and vinylidene fluoride [C2H2F2]; E-CTFE (polyethylenechlorotrifluoroethylene) from chlorotrifluoroethylene and ethylene; PVDF (polyvinylidene fluoride) from vinylidene fluoride monomer; and PVF (polyvinyl fluoride) from vinyl fluoride monomer [C2H3F].

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Fluoropolymer, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Melamine-Formaldehyde – Melamine-Formaldehyde Resin

This plastic is a member of the amino family (which also includes urea) and is probably best known to the public as colorful, rugged dinnerware. However, it also finds use in many household goods, in various electrical applications, and in bonding, adhesives and coatings. products. Melamines offer extreme hardness, excellent colorability and arc-resistant nontracking characteristics. Thermosetting resins formed by the condensation reaction of formaldehyde [HCHO] and melamine [C3N3(NH2)3]. The chemistry is analogous to that of ureaformaldehyde except that the three amino groups of melamine provide more possibilities for cross-linking, are more highly reactive, and all six hydrogen atoms of melamine will react, forming the hexamethyl compound.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Melamine-Formaldehyde, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Nitrile – Nitrile Resin

This family of resins started to appear in the late 1960s and early 1970s. They are called barrier resins since one of their prime attributes is their resistance to the transmission of gas, aroma or flavor, making them useful in packaging applications. These thermoplastic resins are composed of acrylonitrile [CH2CHCN] along with comonomer such as acrylates, methacrylates, butadiene [CH2CHCHCH2] and styrene [C6H5CHCH2]. Both straight copolymers and copolymers grafted onto elastomeric backbones are available.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Nitrile, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Nylon – Polyamide Resin (PA)

The nylon fiber industry was born in 1939 when 64 million pairs of nylon stockings were sold–and to this day, most people still associate nylon with fibers. However, in the 1940s and 1950s work continued on developing nylon compounds that could be molded and extruded or otherwise processed like plastics. Typical applications for nylons are in automotive parts, electrical/electronic uses, and packaging. Nylon is a generic name for a family of long-chain polyamide engineering thermoplastics which have recurring amide groups [-CO-NH-] as an integral part of the main polymer chain. Nylons are synthesized from intermediates such as dicarboxylic acids, diamines, amino acids and lactams, and are identified by numbers denoting the number of carbon atoms in the polymer chain derived from specific constituents, those from the diamine being given first. The second number, if used, denotes the number of carbon atoms derived from a diacid. Commercial nylons are as follows: nylon 4 (polypyrrolidone)-a polymer of 2-pyrrolidone [CH2CH2CH2C(O)NH]; nylon 6 (polycaprolactam)-made by the polycondensation of caprolactam [CH2(CH2)4NHCO]; nylon 6/6-made by condensing hexamethylenediamine [H2N(CH2)6NH2] with adipic acid [COOH(CH2)4COOH]; nylon 6/10-made by condensing hexamethylenediamine with sebacic acid[COOH(CH2)8COOH]; nylon 6/12-made from hexamethylenediamine and a 12-carbon dibasic acid; nylon 11-produced by polycondensation of the monomer 11-amino-undecanoic acid [NH2CH2(CH2)9COOH]; nylon 12-made by the polymerization of laurolactam [CH2(CH2]10CO)or cyclododecalactam, with 11 methylene units between the linking -NH-CO- groups in the polymer chain.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Nylon, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Petroleum – Petroleum Resin

Thermoplastic resins obtained from a variable mixture unsaturated monomers recovered as byproduct from cracked and distilled petroleum streams. They also contain indene [C6H4CH2CHCH], which is copolymerized with a variety of other monomers including styrene [C6H5CHCH2], vinyl toluene [CH2CHC6H4CH3], and methyl indene [C6H3CH3CH2CHCH]. Typical applications are adhesives, printing inks, rubber compounding, and surface coatings.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Petroleum, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Phenolic – Phenolic Resin

These thermosetting resins are credited with being the first commercialized wholly synthetic polymer or plastic, and the second major plastic (the first being cellulose nitrate). The basic raw materials are formaldehyde [HCHO] and phenol [C6H5OH], although almost any reactive phenol or aldehyde can be used. The phenols used commercially are phenol, cresols [CH3C6H4OH], xylenols [(CH3)2C6H3OH], p-t-butylphenol [C4H9C6H4OH], p-phenylphenol [C6H5C6H4OH], bisphenols [(C6H4OH)2], and resorcinol [C6H4(OH)2]. The aldehydes used are formaldehyde and furfural [C4H3OCHO]. In the uncured and semi- cured condition, phenolic resins are used as adhesives, casting resins, potting compounds, and laminating resins. As molding powders, phenolic resins can be found in electrical uses. They are also used in such applications as: automotive distributor caps, fuse blocks and connectors and appliance handles, knobs and bases. Phenolic is the most popular binder for holding the various plies of wood together in plywood.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Phenolic, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Polyacetal – Polyacetal Resin (POM)

POM is an engineering thermoplastic introduced to industry in 1956 as a potential replacement for die-cast metals. Acetal resins are produced by the polymerization of purified formaldehyde [CH2O] into both homopolymer and copolymer types. Industrial end-users are very familiar with the acetals in the form of gears, bearings, bushings, cams, housings, conveyors and any number of moving parts in appliances, business machines, etc., Consumers may be more familiar with applications such as automotive door handles, seat belt components, plumbing fixtures, shaver cartridges, zippers and gas tank caps. Acetals are extremely rigid without being brittle. They have a high melting point, high strength, good frictional properties and resistance to fatigue.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as POM, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Polyamide-Imide – Polyamide-Imide Resin

Engineering thermoplastic resins produced by the condensation reaction of trimellitic anhydride [OCC6H2C2O3] and various aromatic diamines. Typical applications are in the aerospace, automotive and heavy equipment industries.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Polyamide-Imide, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Polyarylate – Polyarylate Resin

Can be used for automotive, appliance and electrical applications requiring oustanding heat resistance. They are engineering thermoplastic resins produced by interfacial polymerization of an aqueous solution of the disodium salt of bisphenol A [(CH3)2C(C6H4OH)2] with phthalic acid chlorides [C6H4(CO)2Cl2] in methylene chloride (CH2Cl2]. The major use of polyarylates is in outdoor lighting.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Polyarylate, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Polybutylene – Polybutylene Resin

Thermoplastic resins offering high flexibility, resistance to creep, cracking and most chemicals. Polybutylene is produced via stereospecific Ziegler-Natta polymerization of butene-1 monomer [CH2CHCH2CH3]. Typical applications are pipe and packaging film.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Polybutylene, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Polycarbonate – Polycarbonate Resin (PC)

Polycarbonates were developed commercially in 1957 and are one of the pioneering members of the family of “engineering thermoplastics” created to compete with die-cast metals. They are strong, tough and rigid, while having the ductility normally associated with softer, lower-modulus thermoplastics. They also have excellent electrical insulating characteristics, maintained over a wide range of temperatures and loading rates. Polycarbonates are transparent and can be processed in a variety of ways, including injection molding, extrusion, blow molding and rotational molding. Typical applications are glazing, appliances, water bottles and electrical uses. Polycarbonates are engineering thermoplastic resins produced by (1) phosgenation of dihydric phenols, usually bisphenol A [(CH3)2C(C6H4OH)2], (2) ester exchange between diaryl carbonates and dihydric phenols, usually between diphenyl carbonate [(C6H5O)2CO] and bisphenol A and (3) interfacial polycondensation of bisphenol A and phosgene [COCl2].

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Polycarbonate, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Polyethylene – Polyethylene Resin (PE)

LDPE and HDPE plastics came to the fore during the World War II years, first as underwater cable coatings, then as a critical insulating material for such vital military applications as radar cable. It was not until the end of the war that the plastic was taken off allocation and freed for consumer use. From that point on, its rise in popularity for both consumer and industrial uses was so spectacular that polyethylene became the first plastic in the U.S. to sell more than 1 billion pounds a year. Today, it is still the largest volume plastic in the United States; in fact, it is the largest in the world. Applications for polyethylenes are many and varied, including: packaging films; trash, garment, grocery and shopping bags; molded housewares; toys; containers; pipe; drums; gasoline tanks; coatings and many others. Polyethylenes are thermoplastic resins obtained by polymerizing the gas ethylene [C2H4]. Low molecular weight polymers of ethylene are fluids used as lubricants; medium weight polymers are waxes miscible with paraffin; and the high molecular weight polymers (i.e., over 6000) are the materials used in the plastics industry. Polymers with densities ranging from about .910 to .925 are called low density; those of densities from .926 to .940 are called medium density; and those from .941 to .965 and over are called high density. The low density types are polymerized at very high pressures and temperatures, and the high density types at relatively low temperatures and pressures. A relatively new type called linear low density polyethylene is manufactured through a variety of processes: gas phase, solution, slurry, or high pressure conversion. A high efficiency catalyst system aids in the polymerization of ethylene and allows for lower temperatures and pressures than those required in making conventional low density polyethylene. Copolymers of ethylene with vinyl acetate, ethyl acrylate, and acrylic acid are commercially important.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Polyethylene (LDPE and HDPE), in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Polyimide – Polyimide Resin

Thermoset polyimides were introduced in the 1960s, followed in the early 1970s by thermoplastic polyimides. They are used in wire enamels, laminates, adhesives, gears, covers, bushings, piston rings, valve seats, and in solution form as a laminating varnish. Polyimides are characterized by repeating imide linkages: There are four types of aromatic polyimides: (1) condensation products made by the reaction pyromellitic dianhydride (PMDA) [C6H2(C2O3)2] and aromatic diamines such as 4,4′-diaminodiphenyl ether [(C6H4NH2)2O]; (2) condensation products of 3,4,3′,4′-benzophenone tetracarboxylic dianhydride (BTDA) [(C6H5)2CO(C2O3)2] and aromatic amines;(3) the reaction of BTDA and a diisocyanate such as 4,4′-methylene-bis(phenylisocyanate) [OCNC6H4CH2C6H4NCO]; and (4) a polyimide based on diaminophenylindane and a dicarboxylic anhydride such as carbonyldiphthalic anhydride [OC6H4(CO)2COC6H4(CO)2]. Thermoset polyimides are produced in condensation polymers that possess reactive terminal groups capable of subsequent cross-linking through an addition reaction.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Polyimide, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

PMMA – Acrylic Resin

Acrylics (Polymethylmethacrylate) introduced in 1936 in the form of hard, rigid and transparent materials. Acrylics were used in World War II as aircraft canopies. Other applications include: lighting diffusers; outdoor signs; automobile tail lights; washbasins and sinks; safety shields; furniture (e.g., tables); skylights, and large-area enclosures for shopping centers, swimming pools, restaurants, etc., and as room dividers. The outstanding resistance to long-term exposure to sunlight and weathering is one of the more important characteristics of acrylic. Also notable is the exceptional clarity and good light transmission (cast acrylic sheet transmits about 92% total light). Acrylics are a family of thermoplastic resins of acrylic esters [CH2CHCOOR] or methacrylic esters [CH2C(CH3)COOR]. The acrylates may be methyl, ethyl, butyl, or 2-ethylhexyl. Usual methacrylates are the methyl, ethyl, butyl, laural and stearyl.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as PMMA, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Polyphenylene Oxide – Polyphenylene Oxide Resin

Engineering thermoplastic resins produced by the oxidative coupling of 2, 6-dimethylphenol [(CH3)2C6H3OH] (xylenol), then blended with impact polystyrene. Typical applications are electrical/electronic uses, business machine parts, appliances, and automotive parts.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Polyphenylene Oxide, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Polyphenylene Sulfide – Polyphenylene Sulfide Resin

Engineering thermoplastic resins produced by the reaction of p-dichlorobenzene [C6H4CI2] with sodium sulfide [Na2S]. A thermoplastic, PPS exhibits excellent heat resistance, as well as outstanding chemical resistance, high stiffness and good retention of mechanical properties at elevated temperatures. The major use for polyphenylene sulfide is in electrical/ electronic parts and automotive parts.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Polyphenylene Sulfide, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Polypropylene – Polypropylene Resin

Another “workhorse” of the plastics industry, polypropylene is one of the high-volume “commodity” thermoplastics. Polypropylene was developed out of the Nobel award-winning work of Karl Ziegler and Professor Natta in Europe, and came to the United States in 1957. It belongs to the “olefins” family, which also includes the polyethylenes, but it is quite different in its properties. It has a low density, is fairly rigid, has a heat distortion temperature of 150 to 200 degres F (making it suitable for “hot-fill” packaging applications), and excellent chemical resistance and electrical properties. Polypropylenes are also very easy to process in all conventional systems. (For information on processing methods, see: processing methods.) Major applications of commercial PP are packaging, automotive, appliances and carpeting. Polypropylene is made by polymerizing propylene [CH3CHCH2] and in the case of copolymers with monomers, with suitable catalysts, generally aluminum alkyl and titanium tetrachloride mixed with solvents. The monomer unit in polypropylene is asymmetric and can assume two regular geometric arrangements: isotactic, with all methyl groups aligned on the same side of the chain, or syndiotactic, with the methyl groups alternating. All other forms, where this positioning is random, are called atactic. Commercial polypropylene contains 90-97% crystalline or isotactic PP with the remainder being atactic. Most processes remove excess atactic PP. This by-product is used in adhesives, caulks, and cablefilling compounds.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Polypropylene, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Polystyrene – Polystyrene Resin

Styrene monomer and the polystyrene resin (PS, GPPS, HIPS, EPS) made from the monomer remained as chemical curiosities for 80 years following their discovery in 1845. It wasn’t until 1925 when commercial production of styrene monomer began in Germany and the U.S. that polystyrene attracted interest, and it wasn’t until after World War II when monomer capacity could be diverted from its essential wartime use for styrene-butadiene synthetic rubber that polystyrene became an important plastic. Today, polystyrene is among the most heavily used commodity thermoplastics. Foamed polystyrene is familiar to consumers as foam cups and containers, protective packaging and building insulation. Polystyrene is also widely used in other packaging and foodservice products, such as trays, disposable plates, cutlery and tumblers. Other applications include: automotive parts, toys, housewares, appliance parts, wall tiles, radio and TV housings, furniture, floats, luggage and many more. High molecular weight thermoplastic resins produced generally by the free-radical polymerization of styrene monomer [C6H5CHCH2] which can be initiated by heating alone but more effectively by heating in the presence of free-radical initiator (such as benzoyl peroxide [(C6H5CO)2O2]. Typical processing techniques are modified mass polymerization or solution polymerization, suspension polymerization, and expandable beads for foam.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Polystyrene, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Polyurethane – Polyurethane Resin

Introduced commercially in 1954, the urethanes have made an impact on a broad spectrum of U.S. industry. They are extremely versatile plastics in terms of the forms in which they are available: flexible or rigid foams, solid elastomers (or rubbers), coatings, adhesives and sealants. Their versatility also extends to chemical structure in that, although the urethanes are generally considered to be thermosets, there are grades of urethane elastomers that are thermoplastic in nature and are supplied in pellet form for molding, calendering and extrusion. Polyurethane’s major and best known form, however, is a foamed or “cellular” material. Like all urethanes, the foams are prepared by first reacting two liquid components–polyols and isocyanates–together. In the presence of a blowing agent, this reaction will produce a foamed material having excellent thermal insulating properties, and, in fact, polyurethane foam is widely used in building insulation. The foams can either be soft and flexible or tough, and rigid, with all the possible variations in-between. Flexible foams have oustanding cushioning characteristics, excellent energy-absorbing properties and long life. They are used in furniture, cushioning, carpet underlay, bedding, packaging, textiles and automotive seating and safety padding. Rigid foams offer outstanding insulating values, excellent compressive strength, good dimensional stability and bouyancy. Besides building insulation, they are also found in refrigerators, trucks, boats (for flotation), and in the construction of furniture components. As coatings, polyurethanes impart excellent protective and decorative effects to wood, metals, rubber, textiles, concrete, paper, leather, other plastics and many other materials. In the form of elastomers, polyurethanes offer superior abrasion resistance and toughness, and are used in applications in which good performance and long service life are important: printing rolls, gaskets and seals, cable insulation, drive and conveyor belts, solid tires and automotive applications. Elastomers can also be processed by reaction injection molding, an important technique for producing automotive panels, front ends and bumpers. The commonly used isocyanates for manufacturing polyurethanes are toluene diisocyanate (TDI) [CH3C6H3(NCO)2], methylene diphenyl isocyanate (MDI) [OCNC6H4CH2C6H4NCO], and polymeric isocyanates (PMDI), obtained by the phosgenation of polyamines derived from the condensation of aniline [C6H5NH2] with formaldehyde (HCHO]. Polyols (with hydroxyl groups) are macroglycols which are either polyester or polyether based. Polyurethane elastomers and resins take the form of liquid castings systems thermoplastic elastomers and resins, microcellular products, and millible gums.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Polyurethane, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

PVAC – Polyvinyl Acetate Resin

Polyvinyl acetate is a thermoplastic resin produced by the polymerization of vinyl acetate monomer [CH3COOCHCH2] in water producing an emulsion with a solids content of 50-55%. Most polyvinyl acetate emulsions contain co-monomers such as n-butyl acrylate, 2-ethyl hexyl acrylate, ethylene, dibutyl maleate and dibutyl fumarate. Polymerization of vinyl acetate with ethylene also can be used to produce solid vinyl acetate/ethylene copolymers with more than 50% vinyl acetate content. Polyvinyl alcohol (PVOH) is produced by methanolysis or hydrolysis of polyvinyl acetates. The reaction can be controlled to produce any degree of replacement of acetate groups. Co-polymers of replaced acetate groupings and other monomers such as ethylene and acrylate esters are commercially important. Polyvinyl butyral (PVB) is made by reacting PVOH with butyraldehyde [CH3(CH2)2CHO]. Polyvinyl formal is made by condensing formaldehyde [HCHO] in presence of PVOH or by the simultaneous hydrolysis and acetylization of PVAc. Polyvinylidene chloride is made by the polymerization of 1,1-dichloroethylene [CH2CCL2]. Typical applications for the above resins are adhesives, paints, coatings and finishes, and packaging.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as PVAC, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

PVC – Polyvinyl Chloride Resin

The birth of polyvinyl chloride, or PVC or vinyl as it is better know to the public, dates back to a German patent in the 1910s, but it was not until the late 1920s that a technically useful product was introduced in the U.S. By the start of World War II, the significance of plasticizing PVC (that is, adding a chemical known as a plasticizer to make PVC flexible and processible) was fully realized. It was during the war that the real importance of this polymer became apparent when, due to the acute shortage of rubber, many companies turned to PVC and began to realize its advantages. Because of its wide use in applications that are close to consumers, such as upholstery, flooring, wall coverings, pipe, siding, apparel and accessories, vinyl is one of the better-known plastics. Vinyls are used mainly for their chemical and weathering resistance, high dielectric properties, or abrasion resistance. Vinyl is also dip molded into gloves, slush molded into boots and foamed to make calendered flooring, leather-like upholstery, shoe fabrics and carpet backing. Vinyls are thermoplastic resins produced by the polymerization of the gas vinyl chloride [CH2CHCl]. Under pressure, vinyl chloride becomes liquefied and is polymerized by one of four basic processes: suspension, emulsion, bulk, or solution polymerization. The pure polymer is hard, brittle and difficult to process, but it becomes flexible when plasticizers are added. A special class of PVC resin of fine particle size, often called dispersion grade resin, can be dispersed in liquid plasticizers to form plastisols. The addition of a volatile diluent or a solvent to the plastisol produces an organosol. Copolymers with vinyl acetate, vinylidene chloride, and maleate and fumarate esters find commercial application.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as PVC, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Styrene Acrylonitrile – Styrene Acrylonitrile Resin

Thermoplastic copolymers of styrene [C6H5CHCH2] and acrylonitrile [CH2CHCN]. SAN resins are random, amorphous copolymers produced by emulsion, suspension, or continuous mass polymerization. Typical uses include automobile instrument panels and interior trim and housewares.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Styrene Acrylonitrile, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Styrene Butadiene Latex – Styrene Butadiene Latex Resin

Styrene butadiene latexes usually have a resin content of about 50%. The styrene/butadiene ratio varies from 54:46 to 80:20. Most are carboxylated by the use of such acids as maleic [HOOCCHCHCOO], fumaric [HOOCCHCHCOOH], acrylic [CH2CHCOOH], or methacrylic [CH2C(CH3)COOH]. Two types of styrene-maleic anhydride (SMA) [(COCH)2O] are available: SMA copolymers, with and without rubber impact modifier (e.g., DYLARKÂ) and SMA terpolymer alloys (e.g., CADONÂ). K-Resin is a solid styrenebutadiene copolymer resin. Acrylic monomers are also used in conjunction with styrene (or styrene plus other monomers) to produce specialty resins. For example, there are transparent terpolymers of methyl methacrylate, butadiene, and styrene (MBS), and others of acrylonitrile, an acrylic monomer, and styrene (AAS). Ion-exchange resins or divinylbenzene-modified polystyrene are another variation. SB latexes are used in carpet backing and paper coatings. The other styrenics are used in paints, coatings, and floor polishes, plus many other uses.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Styrene Butadiene Latex, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Sulfone Polymer – Sulfone Polymer Resin

A family of engineering thermoplastic resins characterized by the sulfone [SO2] group. Polysulfone is made by the reaction of the disodium salt of bisphenol A[(CH3)2C(C6H4OH)2] with 4,4′- dichlorodiphenyl sulfone 4,4′-DCDPS [(C6H4Cl)2SO2]. Polyethersulfone is made by the reaction of 4,4′-DCDPS with potassium hydroxide [KOH]. Polyphenylsulfone is similar to the other sulfone polymers. Typical applications for sulfone polymers are electrical/electronic uses and automotive parts.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Sulfone Polymer, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Thermoplastic Polyester – Thermoplastic Polyester Resin

As molding and extrusion thermoplastic polyester compounds were introduced in the early 1970s, they quickly became important new members of the family of engineering thermoplastics. These linear polyesters are highly crystalline, hard, strong and extremely tough. The most familiar uses are soda bottles and textiles, but they are also used in X-ray film, magnetic tape (audio, video and computer); packaging; metallized film, strapping and labels. They form a family of polyesters in which the polyester backbones are saturated and hence unreactive. The most common commercial types are: PET (polyethylene terephthalate) produced by polycondensation of ethylene glycol [CH2OHCH2OH] with either dimethyl terephthalate (DMT) [C6H4(COOCH3)2] or terephthalic acid (TPA) [C6H4(COOH)2]; and PBT (polybutylene terephthalate) produced by the reaction of DMT with 1,4 butanediol [HO(CH2)4OH].

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Thermoplastic Polyester, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Unsaturated Polyester – Unsaturated Polyester Resin

While this family of plastics goes under the name of “polyesters,” they are quite distinct from the polyesters described above. In fact, they are thermosets, and are probably most familiar to the public for their role in fiberglass reinforced plastics. These materials were introduced to military use (i.e., naval craft) in 1942. After World War II, their characteristics proved extremely appealing to such non-military markets as automotive, marine, corrosion-resistant structures, building, electrical applications, and consumers goods such as luggage, fishing poles and cases and housings of every type and description. These thermosetting resins are made by the condensation reaction between difunctional acids and glycols. The resulting polymer is then dissolved in styrene [C6H5CHCH2] or other vinyl unsaturated monomer. The structures of the acids and glycols used and their proportions, especially the ratio of the unsaturated versus the saturated acid, and the type and amount of monomer used, are all tailored for each resin to balance economy, processing characteristics, and performance properties. One common formulation is the reaction of maleic anhydride [(COCH)2O], phthalic anhydride [C6H4(CO)2O], and propylene glycol [CH3CHOHCH2OH]. Both dicyclopentadiene [C10H12] and isophthalic acid [C6H4(COOH)2] can be substituted for phthalic anhydride. Vinyl ester resins are linear reaction products of bisphenol A [(CH3)2C(C6H4OH)2] and epichlorohydrin [CH2OCHCH2Cl] that are terminated with an unsaturated acid such as methacrylic acid [CH2C(CH3)COOH].

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Unsaturated Polyester, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.

Urea-Formaldehyde – Urea-Formaldehyde Resin

This plastic is another member of the amino family (as is melamine) and was developed in 1929. Like melamine, it is a very hard, scratch-resistant material with good chemical resistance, good electrical qualities and heat resistance up to 170 degrees F. Urea-Formaldehyde resins are formed by the condensation reaction of formaldehyde [HCHO] and urea [CO(NH2)2]. These thermoset resins are clear water-white syrups or white powered materials which can be dispersed in water to form colorless syrups. They cure at elevated temperatures with appropriate catalysts. Molding powders are made by adding fillers to the uncured syrups, forming a consistency suitable for compression and transfer molding. The liquid and dried resins find extensive uses in laminates and chemically resistant coatings. The molding compounds are formed into rigid electrical and decorative products.

Heathland can supply various thermoplastic resins, such as Urea-Formaldehyde, in different qualities and quantities. If you are interested in our materials, please contact us for details and material specifications.