Plastics and polymer composites
compete with numerous metals, mainly aluminium,
light weight and die-cast alloys, steel, and also
stainless steel, titanium, special steels, copper,
brass, tin, etc. and conventional materials such
as wood, concrete, ceramic. All the markets are
more or less penetrated: appliances, automotive,
building, electricity & electronics, health
& care, industry, medical & surgical sectors,
office automation & communication, packaging,
sports & leisure.
Among the myriad of parts or products let us randomly
quote: absorbers, air-intakes, airbags, aquariums,
armours, barriers, bars, bearings, blades, boards,
boats, boots, bows, bumpers, car bodies, cartridges,
circuit boards, cosmetic packaging, couplings,
covers, cups, dishwasher components, disposable
products, doors, enclosures, fenders, fittings,
flooring, foamed cores, frames, gears, grilles,
handles, hatches, headlights, housing, impellers,
jaws, joints, knees, knives, lids, lift components,
lighting, mallets, manifolds, masks, mountings,
panels, pans, plates, ponds, powertrain components,
pump parts, radiators, rods, rollers, seats, shafts,
sheaths, skis, stairs, sunglasses, switches, tanks,
trims, tubs, tumbler components, windows, wings�
The most frequent improvements
concern the rigidity, the strength and the impact
behaviour. Unfortunately, if rigidity is improved
by fillers and reinforcements, impact behaviour
can be lowered and inversely, if impact strength
is enhanced rigidity can be weakened. A comparison
of Modulus and Strength Range according to Fillers
and Reinforcements schematically delimits a zone
of general correspondence between modulus and
strength: both values rise when the reinforcement
shape factor increases in the following order
ground fillers, short fibers (SF), "long"
fibers (LF), semi- and continuous fibers and other
composites.
Collateral effects are generally beneficial concerning:
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