Teflon is a polymer consisting of long chains of carbon atoms that are combined with fluorine.
yes
the crystal structure of halite is basically a crystal structure the is made out of repeating boxes
- Teflon is very resistant to other chemicals - Teflon is a good electrical insulator - Teflon is thermo-resistant - Teflon has a very low coefficient of friction - Teflon is a non-stick material used for coatings - Teflon is a thermoplastic material
Teflon, a DuPont trademarked product, is a fluoropolymer, and there are three flavors of it now. Let's look at them. One is polytetrafluoroethylene (Teflon-PTFE), which is the stuff cookware is coated with. It's carbon and fluorine. Another is perfluoroalkoxy (Teflon-PFA), and it's used to make tubing and other products. It is largely like PTFE, but has a bit of oxygen in its chemistry. The third is fluorinated ethylene propylene (Teflon-FEP), and its about the same as Teflon PFA, which is to say it's mostly carbon and fluorine with a bit of oxygen. A link is provided to the Wikipedia article on Teflon, and you can link to the other articles from there and look at the chemical structure of a given example of one of the fluoropolymers.
Teflon is a polymer consisting of long chains of carbon atoms that are combined with fluorine.
yes
the crystal structure of halite is basically a crystal structure the is made out of repeating boxes
Crystal latice
Crystal latice
The unit cell
its a crystalline solid
nucleotide
The repeating patterns are the latticework of the crystalline structure.
It is a face-centered cubic lattice.
The repeating patterns are the latticework of the crystalline structure.
i dont know continental