Best Price on Hook Bolts for Gabon Manufacturers

A range of hook bolts, used in the roofing industry for fixing cladding and roofing panels to steel frames. Hook bolts, also commonly known as 'J' bolts and supplied with nuts.  Inch Thread Size: 1/4"-4" with various lengths Metric Thread Size: M6-100 with various lengths Material Grade: Carbon Steel, Alloy Steel, and Stainless Steel covers ASTM F1554, A307, A449, A354, A193, A320, F593, ISO 898-1 4.8, 6.8, 8.8, 10.9 Finish: Plain, Black Oxide, Zinc Plated, Hot Dipped Galvanized, and so on. Packing: Bulk about 25 kgs each carton, 36 cartons each pallet. Or, comply with your requirement. Advantage: High Quality and Strict Quality Control, Competitive price,Timely delivery; Technical support, Supply Test Reports Please feel free to contact us for more details.  

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    Freshman Organic Chemistry II (CHEM 125B)

    Isoprenoid or terpene natural products, that seem to be made from isoprene (2-methylbutadiene), are formed by oligomerization of electrophilic isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP). Latex, the polymer of IPP, became commercially important when Charles Goodyear, a New Haven native, discovered how to vulcanize rubber. Statistical mechanics explains such curious properties of rubber as contraction upon heating when tightly stretched. Specific chemical treatment confers useful properties on a wide variety of polymers, including hair, synthetic rubber, and plastics. The structure of copolymers demonstrates non-Hammond behavior and ionic character in the transition state for free-radical polymerization.

    00:00 – Chapter 1. IPP as the Carbon Electrophile in Isoprenoid Biosynthesis
    13:56 – Chapter 2. Latex, Rubber, and Vulcanization
    20:14 – Chapter 3. Understanding Vulcanization – Polymer Properties and Statistical Mechanics
    35:34 – Chapter 4. Other Polymers and Their Properties
    38:22 – Chapter 5. Synthetic Polymers and Free-Radical Copolymerization

    Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: https://oyc.yale.edu

    This course was recorded in Spring 2011.



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