Synthetic plastics. More widely used than Natural Plastics, which include materials such as amber and latex.
Thermoplastics
Formed from long polymer chains joined loosely together
Heating weakens the join and softens plastic (reshapeable)
High density polythene
Low density polythene
Polypropylene
Acrylic
Thermosetting plastics
Formed when a polymer is
mixed with a catalyst to produce
a chemical change
Results in a permanently rigid material
Cannot be reformed, as polymer chains so tightly linked
Epoxy Resin
Melamine Formaldehyde
Extremely strong and durable
Reinforced plastic
Thermoplastic and
thermosetting plastics can
be reinforced by the
addition of fibres
Glass fibre
Carbon fibre
Produced industrially from carbon-based materials.
Polymerisation: monomer molecules created, then joined to
form long chains of molecules called monomers.
Most modern plastics are synthetic
Plastics can be defined as thermosetting or thermoplastics
Can be combined with other materials to reinforce structures
Most can be recycled
Mass production: Injection moulding and vacuum forming