- Mon Jul 10, 2006 7:51 am
#169471
For example in your reference above both BP and 6F polymers have extinction coefficients nearly zero in the visible spectrum (it fluctuates up and down later). This means they behave more like dielectrics (not opeque).
It seems, many of the synthetic resins start off as transparent and then pigmentation is admixed to turn them opeque or give them a tint.
Plastics complicate maters because they are not trully opeque.JDHill wrote:how about this one: http://chemistry.clemson.edu/ChemDocs/s ... 202003.pdf
...should come in handy for that trifluorovinyl ether-based perfluorocyclobutyl material I was working on.
For example in your reference above both BP and 6F polymers have extinction coefficients nearly zero in the visible spectrum (it fluctuates up and down later). This means they behave more like dielectrics (not opeque).
It seems, many of the synthetic resins start off as transparent and then pigmentation is admixed to turn them opeque or give them a tint.
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