Chemical bonding - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Chemical bonding Printer Friendly
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bonding
(redirected from Chemical bonding)

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bonding

Method of producing fabric in which synthetic fibres or filaments are stuck together. Fibres may be bonded in several different ways. One method is to apply adhesive to a web of fibres which is then compressed. Another method is spin bonding in which, owing to their thermoplastic properties, nylon or polyester fibres can be bonded together using heat, without adhesive. For stitch bonding, webs of fibres are stitched together to produce fabrics. Needle punching is a method of bonding in which barbed needles move up and down through webs of fibres laid on either side of an open-weave fabric. As they move, the needles pull fibres through the fabric, forming a bonded fabric.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
The chemical bonding greatly increases the molecular weight and crosslinking of the polymer matrix, according to the company.
Interfacial charge injection is dictated by chemical bonding and the resulting band lineup between the Fermi level of the contact and transport levels (HOMO and LUMO) of the molecule.
Naughton credits this to its chemical bonding of the plastic to metal.
 
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