nitrocellulose$52774$ - definição. O que é nitrocellulose$52774$. Significado, conceito
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O que (quem) é nitrocellulose$52774$ - definição

LIQUID OR POWDER COATING MATERIAL WHICH IS APPLIED THINLY TO OBJECTS TO FORM A HARD FINISH
Oriental lacquer; Oriental Lacquer; Kanshitsu; Nitrocellulose lacquer; Lacquers; Lacquered; Lacquer paint; Urushiol lacquer; Lacquering; Acrylic lacquer; Lackour
  • ''mon'' (emblem)]], Japan, [[Edo period]]
  • Lacquer mixed with water and [[turpentine]], ready for applying to surface.
  • ''Laksha'' is a traditional form of lacquerware from Sri Lanka which is made from [[shellac]] derived from [[Lac]].
  • A Chinese six-pointed tray, red lacquer over wood, from the Song Dynasty (960–1279), 12th–13th century, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  • 100px
  • Lacquer dish]] with Chinese character for longevity, mid 16th century
  • A [[maki-e]] and mother-of-pearl inlay cabinet that was exported from Japan to Europe in the 16th century.

nitrocellulose         
  • [[Table tennis]] ball, prepared from nitrocellulose (Celluloid)
  • Decayed nitrate film, [[EYE Film Institute Netherlands]]
  • [[Jam tin grenade]]s were made in [[World War I]] using gun cotton
  • Nitrocellulose film on a light box, showing deterioration, from Library and Archives Canada collection
  • Lubin film vault]] custodian Stanley Lowry (foreground) surveys the rubble after fire and explosions, June 1914.
  • Deflagration test of nitrocellulose in slow motion
  • Pure nitrocellulose
  • 'United States Inter-Agency Committee for Nitrate Film Vault Tests' – film transfer from 1948 about testing storage and flame suppression methods of nitrate film stock; runtime 00:08:41
  • Workman operating a guncotton press behind a protective rope screen, 1909
HIGHLY FLAMMABLE COMPOUND FORMED BY NITRATING CELLULOSE THROUGH EXPOSURE TO NITRIC ACID OR TO ANOTHER NITRATING AGENT
Gun cotton; Guncotton; Cellulose nitrate; Gun-cotton; Gun-Cotton; C6H8(NO2)2O5; Pyroxyline; Gun Cottont; Pyroxylin; Nitrate film; Flash paper; Nitro-cellulose; Flash Paper; Nitrocellulose film; Flash Paper (Nitrocellulose); Nitrocotton; Collodion cotton; Parlodion; Soluble guncotton; Nitrate film stock; Nitrate stock; Flash cotton; Mononitrocellulose; Dinitrocellulose; Trinitrocellulose; Pyroxilin
¦ noun Chemistry a highly flammable material made by treating cellulose with concentrated nitric acid, used to make explosives and celluloid.
gun-cotton         
  • [[Table tennis]] ball, prepared from nitrocellulose (Celluloid)
  • Decayed nitrate film, [[EYE Film Institute Netherlands]]
  • [[Jam tin grenade]]s were made in [[World War I]] using gun cotton
  • Nitrocellulose film on a light box, showing deterioration, from Library and Archives Canada collection
  • Lubin film vault]] custodian Stanley Lowry (foreground) surveys the rubble after fire and explosions, June 1914.
  • Deflagration test of nitrocellulose in slow motion
  • Pure nitrocellulose
  • 'United States Inter-Agency Committee for Nitrate Film Vault Tests' – film transfer from 1948 about testing storage and flame suppression methods of nitrate film stock; runtime 00:08:41
  • Workman operating a guncotton press behind a protective rope screen, 1909
HIGHLY FLAMMABLE COMPOUND FORMED BY NITRATING CELLULOSE THROUGH EXPOSURE TO NITRIC ACID OR TO ANOTHER NITRATING AGENT
Gun cotton; Guncotton; Cellulose nitrate; Gun-cotton; Gun-Cotton; C6H8(NO2)2O5; Pyroxyline; Gun Cottont; Pyroxylin; Nitrate film; Flash paper; Nitro-cellulose; Flash Paper; Nitrocellulose film; Flash Paper (Nitrocellulose); Nitrocotton; Collodion cotton; Parlodion; Soluble guncotton; Nitrate film stock; Nitrate stock; Flash cotton; Mononitrocellulose; Dinitrocellulose; Trinitrocellulose; Pyroxilin
n.
Pyroxyline.
Guncotton         
  • [[Table tennis]] ball, prepared from nitrocellulose (Celluloid)
  • Decayed nitrate film, [[EYE Film Institute Netherlands]]
  • [[Jam tin grenade]]s were made in [[World War I]] using gun cotton
  • Nitrocellulose film on a light box, showing deterioration, from Library and Archives Canada collection
  • Lubin film vault]] custodian Stanley Lowry (foreground) surveys the rubble after fire and explosions, June 1914.
  • Deflagration test of nitrocellulose in slow motion
  • Pure nitrocellulose
  • 'United States Inter-Agency Committee for Nitrate Film Vault Tests' – film transfer from 1948 about testing storage and flame suppression methods of nitrate film stock; runtime 00:08:41
  • Workman operating a guncotton press behind a protective rope screen, 1909
HIGHLY FLAMMABLE COMPOUND FORMED BY NITRATING CELLULOSE THROUGH EXPOSURE TO NITRIC ACID OR TO ANOTHER NITRATING AGENT
Gun cotton; Guncotton; Cellulose nitrate; Gun-cotton; Gun-Cotton; C6H8(NO2)2O5; Pyroxyline; Gun Cottont; Pyroxylin; Nitrate film; Flash paper; Nitro-cellulose; Flash Paper; Nitrocellulose film; Flash Paper (Nitrocellulose); Nitrocotton; Collodion cotton; Parlodion; Soluble guncotton; Nitrate film stock; Nitrate stock; Flash cotton; Mononitrocellulose; Dinitrocellulose; Trinitrocellulose; Pyroxilin
·- ·see under Gun.

Wikipédia

Lacquer

Lacquer is a type of hard and usually shiny coating or finish applied to materials such as wood or metal. It is most often made from resin extracted from trees and waxes and has been in use since antiquity.

Asian lacquerware, which may be called "true lacquer", are objects coated with the treated, dyed and dried sap of Toxicodendron vernicifluum or related trees, applied in several coats to a base that is usually wood. This dries to a very hard and smooth surface layer which is durable, waterproof, and attractive in feel and look. Asian lacquer is sometimes painted with pictures, inlaid with shell and other materials, or carved, as well as dusted with gold and given other further decorative treatments.

In modern techniques, lacquer means a range of clear or pigmented coatings that dry by solvent evaporation to produce a hard, durable finish. The finish can be of any sheen level from ultra matte to high gloss, and it can be further polished as required. Lacquer finishes are usually harder and more brittle than oil-based or latex paints, and are typically used on hard and smooth surfaces.

In terms of modern finishing products, finishes based on shellac dissolved in alcohol are often called shellac or lac to distinguish them from synthetic lacquer, often called simply lacquer, which consists of synthetic polymers (such as nitrocellulose, cellulose acetate butyrate ("CAB"), or acrylic resin) dissolved in lacquer thinner, a mixture of various organic solvents. Although synthetic lacquer is more durable than shellac, traditional shellac finishes are nevertheless often preferred for their aesthetic characteristics, as with French polish, as well as their "all-natural" and generally food-safe ingredients.