caprolactum for nylon 6 and adipic acid and hexamethylenediamine for nylon 6,6
Nylon is a polyamide.
Nylon was first produced in USA.
Nylon is not an expensive material.
Nylon is a polyamide. There are two: nylon 6.6, which was invented by DuPont, and nylon 6, which was invented by BASF. DuPont had a patent on nylon 6.6 and wouldn't license it; BASF wanted to play in the polyamides market so they created a similar material using a different process. Of the two, nylon 6.6 has a higher melt point and is a little harder than nylon 6. Nylon 6.6 is a polymer of Hexamethylene diamine and Adipic acid (Hexadioic acid) both these compounds contain 6 carbon atoms each. so it is Nylon 6.6. (Which is true for nylon 6.6. Nylon 6 is polymerized caprolactam, so that's called Nylon 6 because caprolactam also has 6 carbon atoms.)
well nylon is non-magnetic , we have magnets in the pickups for a reason.
nylon 6 and nylon 66 are the two most briefly divided types of nylon.
nylon
Nylon.
nylon is a polymer
no, nylon is not biodegradable!
nylon acronyom
caprolactum for nylon 6 and adipic acid and hexamethylenediamine for nylon 6,6
Cotton panties for women...nylon panties for men.
Yes. The proximity of fabric doesn't change the magnetic properties of magnetic paint. Umm... the paint will still be magnetic even if you bury it in the desert where nobody will find it. However, depending on the thickness of the fabric, it may not noticably attract ferrous objects any longer! Try experimenting with thin fabrics like nylon or silk and then slightly thicker fabrics -- to find how thick the fabric can be to still permit the paint to act as a magnet for your purposes.
The dog has a nylon leash.
Nylon is not biodegradable.