Polystyrene is today difficult to be recycled.
Polystyrene is formed from only one monomer - styrene.
See the article in Wikipedia on "layering". The term 'soil layering' is sometimes used to distinguish this outdoor layering technique from 'air layering' which is more usually done on indoor plants, although it may be done on outdoor plants such as Magnolia which are difficult to root by cuttings and usually do not have branches that can be brought down to the ground for 'soil layering'.
They are made from the same polymer, polystyrene. Usually polystyrene is clear, hard and rigid, for example in CD cases. However, styrofoam is created by blowing air through liquid polystyrene. The bubbles are locked in the polystyrene as it solidifies, giving the syrofoam used in packaging and cups. The reason it is compressible is because the air is compressed, rather than the hard, rigid polystyrene itself.
Yes, indeed it is propogated by layering technique.
poly printing is a process where you draw on piece of paper then you stick it onto a polystyrene board poke dots into the board the you take it of and you will spread black in over it and press the inked face onto a piece of paper and there you have a poly print
Polystyrene is NOT biodegradable
Rigid polystyrene is a hard plastic Rigid polystyrene is a hard plastic
The atactic polystyrene is more crystalline than the syndiotactic polystyrene.
Because polystyrene is the polymer of the monomer styrene; poli in the Greek language has the meaning of many.
"layering" As in "layered" igneous intrusion.
Polystyrene is a kind of hard plastic.
Polystyrene is obtained by the polymerization of the monomer styrene.
Polystyrene is not very dense.
Polystyrene is today difficult to be recycled.
Polystyrene was discovered in Germany. Eduard Simon discovered it in 1839. He was from Berlin. Polystyrene is also called thermocole.
the polystyrene film is cover all the ir range.