One of the many polymers that exist is Nylon.
a polymer composite.
One example of a neat polymer is polyethylene. Neat polymers are pure forms of a polymer without any additives or fillers. This allows for studying the intrinsic properties and behavior of the polymer.
polymer
A lipid is both a polymer and monomer. Polymer: Triglyceride Monomers: glycerol and fatty acids
The term "semitelechelic" in reference to polymers may be a bit misleading. A telechelic polymer is one that has a reactive functional group. Most polymers have reactive groups on a least one end. These are monotelechelic. Linear polymers with reactive groups on both ends are ditelechelic. Branched or star-shaped polymers may be tri-, tetra-, penta-, et cetera telechelic. As I understand the nomenclature (professionally, I am a scientist working with polyethylene glycol), "semitelechelic polymer" is usually used to refer to a monotelechelic polymer.
it is one of the polymer family which makes it a polymer
decene
a polymer composite.
One can find information on thermoplastic polymer on an online encyclopedia site such as Wikipedia, or on a question and answer site such as Wiki Answers.
polymer.
One example of a neat polymer is polyethylene. Neat polymers are pure forms of a polymer without any additives or fillers. This allows for studying the intrinsic properties and behavior of the polymer.
With regards to a polymer, one unit is a monomer
polymer
Glycerin is not a polymer because it is a simple compound, not a chain of repeating units like a typical polymer. Glycerin is a triol compound that does not exhibit the characteristics of a polymer structure.
A lipid is both a polymer and monomer. Polymer: Triglyceride Monomers: glycerol and fatty acids
The main difference between alkyd resins and alkyd polymers is the chain length. Most of the time Polymer is large and resins are small. However this is not always the case sometimes it can be a little as the color difference.
A monomer is a single unit that can join together with other monomers to form a polymer. Think of a monomer as the "one" building block, and a polymer as the "many" units created by linking multiple monomers together through chemical bonds.