If the mixture foams excessively, separates, or becomes syrupy, do not apply. |
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You spray it in a big gap, and it sort of foams up dramatically in order to fill said aperture. |
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A new technique for manufacturing identical bubbles produces foams that look more like crystals than soapsuds. |
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Add the olive oil to the pan and, when you can feel a good heat rising, slip in the butter and swirl it in the pan as it foams and melts. |
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These gases are released from aerosols, refrigeration units, insulating foams, and industrial plants. |
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The mean person foams in the mouth, lolls around for 5 seconds, and passes out. |
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The carmaker has filled its body with all kinds of cunningly developed foams and insulators. |
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Forget the skin drying messiness of foams and lathery gels and the nicks, cuts, shave bumps and irritation. |
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Polymeric foams have been used for such things as building insulation, flotation devices and furniture cushions. |
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There are now controls over the type of foams that can be used and the flammability of the covers. |
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Most plastics, varnishes and packaging foams are made from chemicals derived from petroleum. |
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This is a member of a family that foams at the mouth against school vouchers and school testing. |
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Silver dressings are available as foams, hydrocolloids, barrier layers, and charcoal cloth dressings. |
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The nonstick chemicals also serve in stain-resistant coatings and as surfactants in fire-fighting foams, floor polishes, and insecticides. |
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Squirt a little bit of washing up liquid into the cup, fill again with hot water so that the detergent foams. |
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I would like to acknowledge the antimicrobial foams and dilute bleach solutions that are helping to disinfect the rest of the building. |
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British haute cuisine is currently at risk from choking itself to an early death on a diet of squiggles, blobs, foams, and purees. |
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I shall return to the question of foams having an open cell construction. |
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This can be provided by a number of commercially available special dressings, including semipermeable films, foams, hydrocolloids, and calcium alginate swabs. |
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And who can forget the ubiquity of foams and molecular gastronomy, a trend that is, thankfully, on its way out. |
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Every year, billions of these clamshells and other foodservice containers made from petroleum-based foams end up in already overstuffed landfills. |
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Following a big fire, there are always discussions about potential techno fixes, like more supertanker planes, better foams and incombustible construction. |
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Stir and set aside for 5 or 6 minutes, until mixture bubbles and foams. |
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Meanwhile, back at the ranch, the academy foams at the mouth. |
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In contrast, polypropylene foams have excellent chemical resistance and impact resistance, but poor stiffness. |
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The unique mattress is made from extracts of the Hevea tree, a healthier alternative to standard petroleum-based foams. |
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Arbeiter claims gels and foams disperse the pressure point, but create a larger shear area. |
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Porous epoxies with closed cells are easily formed, but stable open and connected epoxy foams are difficult to form. |
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Under moist wound dressings, foams and hydrocolloids dominate the market due to their high absorbency of wound exudates. |
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Martin and Mao formed foams by sintering high-melt-flow-index polymers mixed with a thermal conductor. |
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Lightweight concrete is often achieved by adding air, foams, or lightweight aggregates, with the side effect that the strength is reduced. |
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All the carbon fibre, the foams, the composite materials, the glues, everything comes from petrochemistry. |
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It uses no foams or water-based liquid cleaners that take time to dry, and cleans, deodorises and disinfects your carpets in one action. |
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Jeffcat DM-70 for flexible polyethers, polyesters, and HR molded foams offer high reactivity, good surface cure, and low odor. |
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Manufacturers use these substances widely as flame retardants in plastics and foams. |
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With the advent of mass production of isocyanates and polyester compounds for the manufacture of polyurethane foams. |
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When I take him to the park he finds another dog's poo and before you can get to him he eats it then foams at the mouth. |
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And I speak as someone who adores Scotland, goes there at every opportunity and still foams at the mouth at the injustice of the present set-up. |
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At times, fortunately only a few of them, Maass nearly foams at the mouth in his rage, and he defeats himself when he does. |
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The company's polyolefin foams are said to be soft, flexible, lightweight and easily formable. |
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Solid polymers and syntactic foams are most commonly used in thin-gauge applications. |
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Within this inexpensive but highquality range you will find everything from great smelling aftershaves to shaving foams and deodorants. |
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Additionally, gels, foams, and compressed gases, including nitrogen, carbon dioxide and air can be injected. |
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Some substances, such as polyurethane foams, show an increase in friability with exposure to ultraviolet radiation, such as sunlight. |
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Traditionally, tolylene diisocyanate has been used for the production of flexible slabstock foams for the last 40 years or so. |
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This will be followed by a focus on cell structure and raw materials in water blown foams as important factors for foam strength and incombustibility. |
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The new composite is friendly to in-mold decorating due to its low-pressure formability and its easy adhesion to textiles, scrim, foams, dry-paint films, and solid PP skins. |
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Melamine crystal used in intumescent coatings as a blowing agent to produce flame-retardant resins and as an additive to PUR foams and other polymers. |
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Antiblaze TL-10-ST is a high-viscosity, high-molecular-weight, chlorinated phosphate for automotive and furniture slabstock and molded polyether foams. |
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Made from kraft paper and a thin, peelable polyethylene film, the product is used by manufacturers to protect flexible foams used in the furniture industry. |
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