No, polyester cannot resist heat. No object can 'resist' heat of any kind. Polyester can resist heat up to a certain point, which may only be a few degrees, but no object can fully 'resist' heat.
265? 265 whats? Kelvins? Farenheits? Ambiguous heat units?
Actually, the melting point of polyester depends on it's constituent and density. In clothing this is anomalous because polyester can be present anywhere between 100% and 1%. 100% polyethelene melts at nearly 490° F. This would be much lower if you had a t-shirt that was 50% cotton, 50% polyester fibre (probably closer to 350°, possibly less.)
Because polyester is made from synthetic, petroleum-based chemicals. which melt.
350 degrees 350 degrees
you clean it
Good Question, I have no idea
When a material is melting, the temperature is likely to be increasing. That or the temperature is just above the material's melting/freezing point.
Hey, what is the melting point temperature?OrHouston's weather is like the melting point temperature?
65
Hey, what is the melting point temperature?OrHouston's weather is like the melting point temperature?
During melting the temperature remain constant if it was achieved the melting point.
-- pure alcohol at room temperature -- mercury at room temperature -- oxygen below its boiling temperature -- iron above its melting temperature -- nitrogen below its boiling temperature -- salt above its melting temperature -- gold above its melting temperature -- any other element or compound that is not H2O, above its melting temperature and below its boiling temperature
melting temperature is when something melt in that time what is the temperature of it.
The melting temperature of an alloy is generally lower than the melting temperature of the highest melting temperature of all of its constituents. The eutectic melting temperature is the lowest melting temperature of an alloy system and is in fact sort of defined by that optimal set of percentages of those constituents. The next obvious question is whether there are calculation methods or approximations to determine the melting range of less than "eutectic" percentages.
Primers with more GC content will affect the melting temperature. Higher GC content will have a higher melting temperature.
Any pure substance, including silver, at melting temperature can be either liquid, solid, or both. That is the defining characteristic of the melting temperature.
yes. tthe temperature says the exact same until the whole things that is melting has melted.
265? 265 whats? Kelvins? Farenheits? Ambiguous heat units? Actually, the melting point of polyester depends on it's constituent and density. In clothing this is anomalous because polyester can be present anywhere between 100% and 1%. 100% polyethelene melts at nearly 490° F. This would be much lower if you had a t-shirt that was 50% cotton, 50% polyester fibre (probably closer to 350°, possibly less.)