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What is acrylic emulsion?
- 2026-02-28 16:44:29
- admin
Acrylic Emulsion Acrylic emulsion is a milky white or nearly transparent viscous liquid. It is an emulsion copolymerized from pure acrylate monomers, characterized by small particle size, versatility, and excellent performance. Features: △ Excellent gloss and transparency △ Water and weather resistance △ Alkali and stain resistance △ Good adhesion △ Non-toxic, non-irritating, harmless to huma...
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Development Direction of Acrylate Emulsion Polymerization
- 2026-03-02 17:29:22
- admin
Emulsion polymerization, developed in the last century, has seen its production volume, quality, and variety of products increase year by year due to its unique advantages, with increasingly rational production processes. Furthermore, emulsion polymerization technology is constantly innovating. Besides conventional emulsion polymerization, various polymerization technologies have emerged, such as ...
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Application of Water-Based Acrylic Emulsions in Cigarette Packaging Ink
- 2026-03-06 16:22:00
- admin
I. Why Must Cigarette Packaging Printing Shift to Water-Based Acrylic Emulsions? Traditional solvent-based inks contain large amounts of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) such as benzene and ketones, which not only harm the health of operators but also easily leave residues on packaging, affecting tobacco safety. Water-based acrylic emulsions, using water as the dispersion medium, have extremely l...
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Why are water-based acrylic resins commonly used in coatings
- 2026-03-11 17:30:12
- admin
Acrylic resins are an indispensable and commonly used resin in water-based coatings. They are widely used in metal coatings, ABS and PC coatings, and glass coatings requiring hardness, especially solid acrylic resins. There are many types of solid acrylic resins. Some solid acrylic resins can be used to produce water-based paints, including the currently popular UV-cured coatings and high-sol...
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Basic Knowledge of Waterborne Polyurethane Emulsion Synthesis
- 2026-03-12 17:02:25
- admin
01 Polyurethane The structure of polyurethane is formed by the reaction of polyisocyanates (e.g., diisocyanate OCN-R-NCO) and polyols (e.g., diol HO-R-OH), where urethane segments are repeating structural units. Polyurethane structures have structures similar to amide and ester groups; therefore, the chemical and physical properties of polyurethane are between those of polyamides and polyesters. S...