This is a cohesive interaction.
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Paper or plastic tape with an adhesive on it.
A paper or plastic 'carrier' coated with adhesive.
Boil a pot of water on a stove (but not to hot, it could ruin the cardboard). The steam from the boiling water should be able to moisten the adhesive. Then, take your nail and SLOWLY peel the adhesive, but test it on a corner first. Finish up and then clean any other minor residues (assuming that it is a project)
They have an adhesive on part of the back. The adhesive is generally not strong enough to make a good glue, but it's tacky enough to make a decent temporary attachment. Low Mw Poly(acrylates) (actually, oligo-acrylates would probably be a better term) tend to be good candidates for this kind of adhesive. The glue used was actually a failure of an adhesive, invented by 3M. It found a use for temporairly sticking attachments to other paper without causing damage.
Yes, water beads up on wax paper because its cohesive forces are greater than the adhesive forces.
Yes.
There is no adhesive in toilet paper.
A thumbtack, a magnet, or an adhesive or adhesive tape.
One of the companies that makes adhesive paper is Sonoco. Post-it-Note papers are made by the company 3M. Adhesive Shelf liners which are made of paper are manufactured by Con-Tact Brand.
That's not a right question. everything is cohesive or adhesive. it's just how well the properties are. for alcohol, dropping a droplet of it on to wax paper will cause it to stick to the surface badly meaning that it's adhesive properties suck. It's cohesion also sucks because the molecules don't hold together well at all when moving the droplet on the wax paper.
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I believe these are just different names for cheap vinyl floor tile where you pull off a sheet of shiny paper to expose the adhesive.
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Ryobi recommends that the backing pad only be used with adhesive paper.
Adhesive tape is formed from a support (plastic, paper, cloth) and the coating adhesive (a polymeric material).
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