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Bakelite (/ˈbeɪkəlaɪt/ BAY-kə-lyte),
formally polyoxybenzylmethyleneglycolanhydride, is a
thermosetting phenol formaldehyde resin,
formed from a condensation...
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photographic paper in 1893, and
Bakelite in 1907. He has been
called "The
Father of the
Plastics Industry" for his
invention of
Bakelite, an inexpensive, non-flammable...
- A
rotary dial is a
component of a
telephone or a
telephone switchboard that
implements a
signaling technology in
telecommunications known as
pulse dialing...
-
phenol or
substituted phenol with formaldehyde. Used as the
basis for
Bakelite, PFs were the
first commercial synthetic resins. They have been widely...
- The
Bakelite anti-tank mine type I and type II were
Italian anti-tank
mines produced during the
Second World War. As the name suggests, the
mines used...
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Resolution Performance Products,
Resolution Specialty Materials, and
Bakelite AG. At that time they also
acquired Pacific Epoxy Products. In 2010, the...
- release, they were
Bakelite Radio Volume II (2003),
Bakelite Radio Volume III (2004)
Bakelite Radio Volume IV (2007), and
Bakelite Radio Volume I (2009)...
- the
Solvay process and the
Gramme dynamo, respectively, in the 1860s.
Bakelite was
developed in 1907–1909 by Leo Baekeland.
Ernest Solvay also
acted as...
- the
American Catalin Corporation of New York City, when the
patent on
Bakelite expired that year. A
phenol formaldehyde resin, it can be
worked with files...
- The
Bakelite phone (bakelittelefon)
officially known as
Ericsson DBH 1001, and
later as M33, N1020, and ED 702, was a
Swedish line of
telephones made from...