Thermoplastic Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Thermoplastic stocks.

Thermoplastic Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Nov 22 CSL Carlisle Companies Earns "Most Honored Company" Designation From Extel All-America Executive Team Rankings for the Second Straight Year
Nov 22 AVNT Avient (NYSE:AVNT) shareholders have earned a 13% CAGR over the last five years
Nov 22 OII Oceaneering International (OII) Up 17% Since Last Earnings Report: Can It Continue?
Nov 22 AME KeyBanc changes rating, PT on industrials following a mixed Q3
Nov 21 OII Oceaneering International promotes Benjamin M. Laura to COO
Nov 21 OII Oceaneering Announces the Promotion of Benjamin M. Laura to Senior Vice President and Chief Operating Officer
Nov 21 OC Why Owens Corning (OC) is a Top Momentum Stock for the Long-Term
Nov 21 OII Oceaneering to Sell Its Entertainment Unit to Infinite Acquisitions
Nov 21 OC 3 Dirt Cheap Dividend Stocks to Buy and Hold
Nov 20 PCT PureCycle Technologies files for common stock offering
Nov 20 CSL These 19 stocks are poised for tax reform turbocharge - Jefferies
Nov 20 OC AZEK's Q4 Earnings & Sales Top Estimates, Adjusted EBITDA Down Y/Y
Nov 20 SSYS Gulf Wind Technology Leverages Stratasys 3D Printing to Accelerate Innovation in Wind Turbine Design
Nov 20 PCT PureCycle Technologies, Inc. (PCT): Among Harvard University’s Top Stock Picks
Nov 20 PCTTU PureCycle Technologies, Inc. (PCT): Among Harvard University’s Top Stock Picks
Nov 19 OII Infinite Acquisitions Partners announces LOI with Oceaneering International
Nov 19 SSYS Baralan and Stratasys Transform Cosmetic Packaging with PolyJet 3D Printing Technology
Nov 18 CSL Could These Three Passive Income Stocks Become Dividend Kings In The Near Future?
Thermoplastic

A thermoplastic, or thermosoftening plastic, is a plastic polymer material that becomes pliable or moldable at a certain elevated temperature and solidifies upon cooling.Most thermoplastics have a high molecular weight. The polymer chains associate by intermolecular forces, which weaken rapidly with increased temperature, yielding a viscous liquid. In this state, thermoplastics may be reshaped and are typically used to produce parts by various polymer processing techniques such as injection molding, compression molding, calendering, and extrusion. Thermoplastics differ from thermosetting polymers (or "thermosets"), which form irreversible chemical bonds during the curing process. Thermosets do not melt when heated, but typically decompose and do not reform upon cooling.

Above its glass transition temperature and below its melting point, the physical properties of a thermoplastic change drastically without an associated phase change. Some thermoplastics do not fully crystallize below the glass transition temperature, retaining some or all of their amorphous characteristics. Amorphous and semi-amorphous plastics are used when high optical clarity is necessary, as light is scattered strongly by crystallites larger than its wavelength. Amorphous and semi-amorphous plastics are less resistant to chemical attack and environmental stress cracking because they lack a crystalline structure.
Brittleness can be decreased with the addition of plasticizers, which increases the mobility of amorphous chain segments to effectively lower the glass transition temperature. Modification of the polymer through copolymerization or through the addition of non-reactive side chains to monomers before polymerization can also lower it. Before these techniques were employed, plastic automobile parts would often crack when exposed to cold temperatures. These are linear or slightly branched long chain molecules capable of repeatedly softening on heating and hardening on cooling.

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