A chemist would likely choose to study better ways to recycle plastics, as this field directly involves chemical processes and materials science. Understanding the chemical properties of plastics and developing methods for their breakdown and reuse aligns with the chemist's expertise. While the other topics are important, they may fall more under environmental science or engineering disciplines.
What plastics are there that we use?
they are plastics that can be bad for our environment
Plastics are light due to the
John Sasso has written: 'Plastics in practice' -- subject(s): Plastics 'Plastics for industrial use' -- subject(s): Plastics
No, not all plastics are petrochemicals. A few examples of bioplastics (plastics made from biologic sources) include Polyhydroxyalkanoates, Polylactic Acids and a wider variety of starch based plastics.
we can join plastics by burnig
Many plastics are.
You can separate plastics by color to make it easier for recycling companies. You can also separate it by the types of plastics.
three types of thermo plastics are POLYETHENE.....,POLYPROPYLENE........and.......POLYVINYL CHLORIDE(PVC)
All solids can reflect sound. Different plastics reflect by different amounts. Sound waves are vibrations. They transfer energy to the solid when they hit it, and the particles of solid vibrate more, and can transfer this vibration back to the air.
The scientific term for plastics is polymers.
mostly thermosetting plastics like bakelite