Overview
- Editors:
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Raymond B. Seymour
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University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, USA
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Gerald S. Kirshenbaum
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Celanese Engineering Resins, Chatham, USA
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Table of contents (41 papers)
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Introduction
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- Lawrence H. Gillespie Jr.
Pages 9-15
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Engineering Thermoplastics
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Polyamides
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- Paul Matthies, Wolfgang F. Seydl
Pages 39-53
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- G. B. Apgar, M. J. Koskoski
Pages 55-65
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Polyesters
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- Donal McNally, John S. Gall
Pages 71-79
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- Lloyd M. Robeson, James M. Tibbitt
Pages 95-103
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Acetals
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- Kenneth J. Persak, Richard A. Fleming
Pages 105-114
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- Thomas J. Dolce, Francis B. McAndrew
Pages 115-124
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Sulfur-Containing Polymers
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- R. A. Clendinning, A. G. Farnham, R. N. Johnson
Pages 149-158
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- M. E. Sauers, L. A. McKenna, C. N. Merriam
Pages 159-168
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About this book
According to Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe's (1740-1832) Mineralogy and Geology, "The history of science is science." A sesquicentennial later, one may state that the history of high performance polymers is the science of these important engineering polymers. Many of the inventors of these superior materials of construction have stood on the thresholds of the new and have recounted their experiences (trials, tribulations and satisfactions) in the symposium and in their chapters in this book. Those who have not accepted the historical approach in the past, should now recognize the value of the historical viewpoint for studying new developments, such as general purpose polymers and, to a greater degree, the high performance polymers. To put polymer science into its proper perspective, its worth recalling that historically, the ages of civilization have been named according to the materials that dominated that period. First there was the Stone Age eventually followed by the Tin, Bronze, Iron and Steel Ages. Today many historians consider us living in the Age of Synthetics: Polymers, Fibers, Plastics, Elastomers, Films, Coatings, Adhesives, etc. It is also interesting to note that in the early 1980's, Lord Todd, then President of the Royal Society of Chemistry was asked what has been chemistry's biggest contribution to society. He felt that despite all the marvelous medical advances, chemistry's biggest contribution was the development of polymeri zation. Man's knowledge of polymer science is so new that Professor Herman F.
Editors and Affiliations
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University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, USA
Raymond B. Seymour
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Celanese Engineering Resins, Chatham, USA
Gerald S. Kirshenbaum