Certified for assembly of disposable and reusable medical devices
This is a flexible resin newly USP Class VI certified for assembly of disposable and reusable medical devices. It has no solvents or volatile ingredients, and is 100 percent reactive. It can cure quickly at room temperature or more quickly at higher temperatures. Once cured, it is strong and resists vibration, impact and thermal shock. It resists many sterilants and is an excellent electrical insulator. It functions in a temperature range from -80 to more than 250F. It bonds well to metals, ceramic, glass, most polymers and elastomers.
Almost every automaker has had to 'pick a side' when it comes to alternative fuel options and ways to divest from a reliance on gasoline. Fiat is looking to back compressed natural gas or liquid propane as an interim solution.
Designing and filling a new type of water bottle might take less engineering work, but the description will help kids understand how science, math, and engineering influence their lives even through things that seem mundane.
Against a backdrop of mounting product complexity and a need to keep a lid on development costs, companies are recognizing a need to make simulation a more integral part of the design process. In response, vendors in the CAD world are building out CAE functionality as part of their CAD suites while simulation vendors are building tighter integrations to leading CAD tools. Keith Meintjes, Ph.D., Practice Manager, Simulation and Analysis at CIMdata, Inc., joins Design News CAD Editor Beth Stackpole in this radio program to explore the new face of integrated CAD and CAE, how companies are benefitting from this tighter partnership between platforms, and how integrating CAE earlier in the development cycle pays off in optimized product designs.
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