Testing can be conducted to ascertain melting point, degree of crystallinity, and glass-transition temperature, or for component quantification. |
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As the bacon cooked, the fat on the bacon reached its melting point and turned into liquid, leaving the pure, healthy pork meat behind. |
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Purified lipid-DNA adducts had a characteristic fluorescent spectra and showed a decrease of hyperchromicity and melting point. |
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The high melting point of tungsten makes it an obvious choice for structural applications exposed to very high temperatures. |
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The soft metal gallium has such a low melting point that it will liquefy on contact with your hand. |
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Because the bonds are not symmetrical, glass is isotropic and has no definite melting point. |
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Because of the low melting point of the solder the material remains fluid during processing despite the large proportion of filler material. |
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The heat has to be about four thousand degrees Fahrenheit, which was almost the melting point of gold. |
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Cocoa butter is the fat in chocolate and it has a melting point very close to body temperature. |
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Most modern calculations rely on the fact that we believe the inner core to be made up of iron and nickel that is just about at melting point. |
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Pure nickel is ductile and tough because it possesses a face-centered cube crystal structure up to its melting point. |
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Bronze is easier to cast than copper because it has a lower melting point and is more liquid than copper at a given temperature. |
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Butter has a lower melting point than hard white fats such as lard and hardened vegetable cooking fat. |
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The water acts as a simple flux to lower the melting point of some minerals. |
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In its simplest form this involved heating a metal to melting point in a vessel made of a dried paste of bone ash. |
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Heating a metal to temperatures below its melting point causes it to expand or increase in length. |
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Owing to its high melting point, manufacturing platinum jewellery is also an art. |
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Deicing chemicals are used to get ice off pavements, sidewalks and other surfaces by lowering the melting point of the ice. |
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He got the formula right, but had not looked up the melting point of aluminum. |
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It has a high melting point and is a good conductor of heat and electricity. |
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The main physical specification of coumarin is its purity, of which the melting point is the indicator. |
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If the melting point is below this temperature and the boiling point is above it then the chemical is a liquid at standard temperature and pressure. |
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However, useful tools can be made by mixing WC powder with cobalt powder and sintering at a temperature above the melting point of cobalt. |
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The freezing point is the same as the melting point of the solid. |
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Cooling molten silica below the melting point results in fused silica, a rigid, transparent substance, chemically unreactive to the vast majority of substances. |
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The actual melting point of steels is nearly twice as hot, at temperatures difficult to reach outside the specialized conditions of a foundry or forge. |
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The correct choice of cation is very important because this influences the melting point, viscosity and electrochemical reductive stability. |
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It also increases the efficiency of electron discharge tubes and imparts creep strength to wire at temperatures above one-half the absolute melting point of tungsten. |
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By adding copper to the silver, the mediaeval craftsmen were hardening and lowering the melting point of silver, although it still remained silvery in colour. |
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It is a white odourless solid, with a melting point that ranges from 172-184 ºC to 201-205 ºC, depending on the crystallisation status. |
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Significant amounts are also used in die-casting due to its low melting point and low viscosity when in liquid form. |
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Practically all thermoplastics can be processed independent from their melting point. |
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But it had such a high melting point and it cooled so rapidly once exposed to air, that it didn't really flow before it congealed into solid rock. |
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The ambiant temperature, which was above benzene's melting point, did not prevent the pumping of the liquid benzene. |
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Melt and percolation through the weak firn layer bring most of the freeboard volume to the melting point. |
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This association explains strong dependencies of the statistical segment length on tacticity and temperature in the vicinity of the melting point. |
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Pig iron and cast iron have higher carbon content than wrought iron, but have a lower melting point than iron or steel. |
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Air was blown in through a tuyere to heat the bloomery to a temperature somewhat below the melting point of iron. |
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Sodium carbonate acts as a flux for silica, lowering the melting point of the mixture to something achievable without special materials. |
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The high melting point is also consistent with its description as an ionic solid. |
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There were queries about recombinant DNA, Halley's comet, and the metal with the highest melting point. |
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It is nontoxic, nonallergenic, chemically inert, and recyclable with a relatively low melting point. |
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A small amount of lead lowers the melting point of the alloy. |
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Fluocerite in the matrass yields water and at the melting point of glass the matrass is attacked at a distance from the assay. |
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The decarburized iron, having a higher melting point than cast iron, was raked into globs by the puddler. |
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This increases the spacing between the amide groups, resulting in decreased mechanical properties and melting point. |
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Thermoplastics with a melting point up to approx. 270°C can be processed. |
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This incombustible and long-lasting phase change material has its melting point at around 26 °C. It becomes effective at a temperature range where the comfortableness of most people is noticeably affected. |
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If a pure metal was melted in a high pressure furnace in a lab, the melting point would increase. |
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The scientists determined that the melting point of sugar is heating-rate dependent. |
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The characteristic melting points allow scientists to identify an unknown substance by measuring its melting point. |
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Despite its elusiveness, the metal's unique characteristics, including a high melting point of 3,186°C, endear it to manufacturers of things like jet engines. |
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But platinum posed a major challenge for goldsmiths: It had to be forged in a white-hot state, because it is extremely hard and has a melting point of 1769 degrees Celsius. |
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In addition, gelatin's viscosity above melting point creates a smooth consistency and a perfect fat-like mouthfeel. |
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It can be used the manufacture of synthetic firelogs where its adhesion and high melting point properties enhance the stability and burning characteristics of the compressed log. |
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Copper has a lower melting point than steel, and its tendency to become brittle with time and usage makes it unsuitable for use in fuel oil systems. |
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The melting point of any pure substance is the temperature at which, under common atmospheric pressure, that substance changes its state from solid to liquid. |
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Metallic lead is a bluish-grey soft metal that has a low melting point. |
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The melting point is of course verified for each batch of wax produced. |
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The interest from a commercial perspective is that the oil is high in stearic and oleic acids and has a very precise melting point, around 34 degrees Celsius, which means that it remains solid at room temperature. |
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The category of high temperature welding comprises all welding methods where plastics are heated up to a temperature far beyond their melting point by means of special heating plates. |
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The thin layer chromatography technique with eluant shows the presence of only one product and characteristic tests of odor and melting point. |
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The required temperature varies over a very large range, both in absolute terms and in terms of the melting point of the base metal. |
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Under normal operation the water temperature could not exceed that of boiling water and kept the lead below its melting point. |
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The upper temperature limit for the filament is the melting point of the metal. |
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He predicted that the melting point of ice must fall with pressure, otherwise its expansion on freezing could be exploited in a perpetuum mobile. |
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Thermally, a temperate glacier is at melting point throughout the year, from its surface to its base. |
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These alloys can be produced to modify the hardness and other metallurgical properties, to control melting point or to create exotic colors. |
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Lead's high density, low melting point, ductility and relative inertness to oxidation make it useful. |
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Lead metal has several useful mechanical properties, including high density, low melting point, ductility, and relative inertness. |
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The low melting point together with the low viscosity of the alloy makes possible the production of small and intricate shapes. |
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They are used in conductive inks for printed electronics, and have a much lower melting point than larger silver particles of micrometre size. |
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This is achieved by increasing the internal energy of the ice beyond the melting point. |
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Near the melting point, the liquid plutonium has very high viscosity and surface tension compared to other metals. |
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Mercury is the only elemental metal with a known melting point lower than caesium. |
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The specific mixture of hydrocarbons gives a fuel its characteristic properties, such as boiling point, melting point, density, viscosity, etc. |
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For a metal matrix material such as titanium foil, the melding event is a fusing at high pressure and a temperature near the melting point. |
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They're at the melting point between order and disorder. |
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Idris Elba has, in the eyes of many, reached the melting point. |
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The oxidic layer has a high melting point, and it does not melt in the welding process. |
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Iran Alamzadeh, the project manager, said hydrogenation increases the shelf life and melting point of oils. |
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In contrast, an isotactic stereoblock polymer has a higher melting point. |
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Volcanoes formed near or above subducting zones are created because the subducting tectonic plate adds volatiles to the overriding plate that lowers its melting point. |
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Whenever there is freezing rain or snow which occurs at a temperature near the melting point, it is common for ice to build up on the windows of vehicles. |
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Francium is the element with the melting point closest to ice. |
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Lead is soft and malleable, and has a relatively low melting point. |
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Atmer 7510 is supplied as a free-flowing pellet which Croda says makes it easy to dose as its physical form and melting point closely match the base polymer. |
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The tow melting point of 85 C and a sufficient dwell time in the screw chamber led to the required homogenisation of the colour pigments with the basic polymer in the melt. |
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With it, Davy created the first incandescent light by passing electric current through a thin strip of platinum, chosen because the metal had an extremely high melting point. |
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Cast iron is not malleable even when hot, but it can be formed by casting as it has a lower melting point than steel and good castability properties. |
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However, the design of a bloomery made it difficult to reach the melting point of iron and also prevented the concentration of carbon monoxide from becoming high. |
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In his paper Observations of two persistent degrees on a thermometer, he recounted his experiments showing that the melting point of ice is essentially unaffected by pressure. |
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