Difference between revisions of "Polyethylene foam"
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
== Synonyms and Related Terms == | == Synonyms and Related Terms == | ||
− | [[Ethafoam]]; [[Volara]]; Polyplank; Micro-foam; [[Plastazote]]; Minicell; Sentinel; Cell-Aire | + | [[Ethafoam]]; [[Volara]]; [[PolyPlank|Polyplank]]; Micro-foam; [[Plastazote]]; Minicell; Sentinel; Cell-Aire |
==Physical and Chemical Properties== | ==Physical and Chemical Properties== |
Revision as of 12:39, 10 November 2023
Description
A durable, chemically stable, closed-cell foam. Polyethylene (PE) foams provide a wide variety of shock-absorption, vibration-dampening, and insulation properties. The foams cut, carve and bond easily, with only the heaviest densities requiring power saws to cut. They will not off-gas, and are widely considered viable interior materials for long-term storage containers. PE foams are recyclable.
Crosslinked PE foam a high-density polyethylene with cross-linked bonds in the polymer structure, changing the thermoplastic into an elastomer. They share the qualities listed above, but have ultra-fine cells for soft, skin-like surfaces suitable for direct contact with most stable object surfaces. Unlike non-crosslinked PE foams, they are not recyclable. Thinner products like Volara are crosslinked by irradiation while thicker products like Plastazote and Minicell are chemically crosslinked.
See Polyethylene.
Synonyms and Related Terms
Ethafoam; Volara; Polyplank; Micro-foam; Plastazote; Minicell; Sentinel; Cell-Aire
Physical and Chemical Properties
- PACCIN: Polyethylene Foams
- The Rubber Company: Polyethylene Foam Sheeting Data Sheet