RESINOUS PLASTICS POLYMERS

Brand Owner (click to sort) Address Description
NANOLON STEFANDL, ROLAND E. P.O. Box 906 Pennington NJ 08534 Resinous plastics and polymers in the form of powders, granules, flakes, pellets, beads, blanks, slabs, chips, and the like for molding applications and other use in Industrial Arts;
NANOLON THE ROLZ PARTNERS, INC. 66 WITHERSPOON STREET PRINCETON NJ 08542 Resinous plastics and polymers in the form of powder, granules, flakes, pellets, beads, fibers, blanks, slabs, chips, sheets, and the like for molding applications and all other use in industrial arts and industrial technologies;
NANOLON Stefandl, Roland 174 Nassau Street , #338 Princeton NJ 08542 Resinous plastics and polymers in the form of powder, granules, flakes, pellets, beads, fibers, blanks, slabs, chips, sheets, and the like for molding applications and all other use in industrial arts and industrial technologies;
 

Where the owner name is not linked, that owner no longer owns the brand

   
Technical Examples
  1. A process for rapidly infusing a synthetic resinous substrate with an alkali metal nitrite, comprises (a) essentially completely dissolving the alkali metal nitrite in supercritical carbon dioxide to form a solids-free solution having from about 1 to 15% by weight of the alkali metal nitrite; (b) contacting the synthetic resinous substrate with the solution for a time sufficient to transfer at least a portion of the alkali metal nitrite into the synthetic resinous substrate while maintaining the carbon dioxide under supercritical conditions; and, (c) decreasing pressure or temperature, or both, on the synthetic resinous material sufficiently to evolve carbon dioxide and leave micronized solid alkali metal nitrite crystals in an amount less than 2% by weight essentially uniformly distributed in the synthetic resinous substrate. If desired, up to about 15% by weight of sodium nitrite or potassium nitrite may be transported and deposited in the substrate if transparency of the substrate is irrelevant, because the substrate tends to become opaque.