Polymers Stocks List

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

Polymers Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 1 ASH Ashland Inc. (ASH) Q2 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 1 EMN Planning Is Everything - at Work and on the Ice
May 1 WLK Westlake (WLK) Reports Q1 Earnings: What Key Metrics Have to Say
May 1 WLK Westlake Chemical Partners LP Reports Q1 2024 Earnings, Aligns with Analyst Projections
May 1 WLK Westlake Chemical (WLK) Q1 Earnings and Revenues Top Estimates
May 1 SRDX Surmodics beats top-line and bottom-line estimates; updates FY24 outlook
May 1 SRDX Surmodics Reports Second Quarter of Fiscal Year 2024 Financial Results; Updates Fiscal Year 2024 Financial Guidance
May 1 WLK Westlake Corporation Non-GAAP EPS of $1.34 beats by $0.31, revenue of $2.98B beats by $50M
May 1 WLK Westlake Corporation Reports First Quarter 2024 Results
Apr 30 ASH Ashland Inc (ASH) Q2 Fiscal 2024 Earnings: Surpasses EPS Estimates, Faces Revenue Decline
Apr 30 ASH Ashland Non-GAAP EPS of $1.27 beats by $0.14, revenue of $575M in-line
Apr 30 ASH Ashland reports financial results1 for second quarter fiscal 2024; issues outlook for third quarter and full-year fiscal 2024
Apr 30 WLK Westlake Corporation Q1 2024 Earnings Preview
Apr 30 SRDX Can the 4 Medical Device Stocks Hit Targets This Earnings Season?
Apr 30 AVNT Avient (AVNT) Reports Next Week: Wall Street Expects Earnings Growth
Apr 30 WAT Earnings Preview: Waters (WAT) Q1 Earnings Expected to Decline
Apr 30 WLK Westlake (WLK) Q1 Earnings on the Horizon: Analysts' Insights on Key Performance Measures
Apr 30 EMN Eastman Chemical Company (NYSE:EMN) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
Apr 30 EMN Domino's Pizza To Rally Over 10%? Here Are 10 Top Analyst Forecasts For Tuesday
Apr 29 ASH Ashland Q2 2024 Earnings Preview
Polymers

A polymer (; Greek poly-, "many" + -mer, "part") is a large molecule, or macromolecule, composed of many repeated subunits. Due to their broad range of properties, both synthetic and natural polymers play essential and ubiquitous roles in everyday life. Polymers range from familiar synthetic plastics such as polystyrene to natural biopolymers such as DNA and proteins that are fundamental to biological structure and function. Polymers, both natural and synthetic, are created via polymerization of many small molecules, known as monomers. Their consequently large molecular mass relative to small molecule compounds produces unique physical properties, including toughness, viscoelasticity, and a tendency to form glasses and semicrystalline structures rather than crystals. The terms polymer and resin are often synonymous with plastic.
The term "polymer" derives from the Greek word πολύς (polus, meaning "many, much") and μέρος (meros, meaning "part"), and refers to a molecule whose structure is composed of multiple repeating units, from which originates a characteristic of high relative molecular mass and attendant properties. The units composing polymers derive, actually or conceptually, from molecules of low relative molecular mass. The term was coined in 1833 by Jöns Jacob Berzelius, though with a definition distinct from the modern IUPAC definition. The modern concept of polymers as covalently bonded macromolecular structures was proposed in 1920 by Hermann Staudinger, who spent the next decade finding experimental evidence for this hypothesis.Polymers are studied in the fields of biophysics and macromolecular science, and polymer science (which includes polymer chemistry and polymer physics). Historically, products arising from the linkage of repeating units by covalent chemical bonds have been the primary focus of polymer science; emerging important areas of the science now focus on non-covalent links. Polyisoprene of latex rubber is an example of a natural/biological polymer, and the polystyrene of styrofoam is an example of a synthetic polymer. In biological contexts, essentially all biological macromolecules—i.e., proteins (polyamides), nucleic acids (polynucleotides), and polysaccharides—are purely polymeric, or are composed in large part of polymeric components—e.g., isoprenylated/lipid-modified glycoproteins, where small lipidic molecules and oligosaccharide modifications occur on the polyamide backbone of the protein.The simplest theoretical models for polymers are ideal chains.

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