- Expanded Polystyrene
- Flame Retardant EPS
- Fire Resistant EPS
- FMS EPS
- FSA EPS
- EPP Black
- EPP Gray
- EPP White
- Expanded Polypropylene AG17
- Expanded Polypropylene CH17
- Expanded Polypropylene CS17
- Expanded Polypropylene DB17
- Expanded Polypropylene GR17
- Expanded Polypropylene ML17
- Expanded Polypropylene NF17
- Expanded Polypropylene PB17
- Expanded Polypropylene PR15
- Expanded Polypropylene RD17
- Expanded Polypropylene TL17
- Expanded Polypropylene YL17
- Expanded Polypropylene ZS15
- 4,4'-Oxydianiline
Expandable Polystyrene EPS News
Expanded Polystyrene History
In 1839, a German apothecary Eduard Simon discovered polystyrene. Although Simon was able to isolate the substance from natural resin, he did not know what he had discovered. It wasn't until 80 years later that organic chemist Hermann Staudinger, realised Simon's discovery, comprised of long chains of styrene molecules, was a plastic polymer.
In 1922, Hermann Staudinger published his theories on polymers, stating that natural rubbers were made up of long repetitive chains of monomers that gave rubber its elasticity. He went on to write that the materials manufactured by the thermal processing of styrene were similar to rubber. They were the high polymers including polystyrene. In 1953, Hermann Staudinger won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry for his research.
In 1930, the scientists at BASF developed a way to commercially manufacture polystyrene in a pellet form.
Today, EPS is one of the most versatile and cost effective materials for both packaging and building/construction applications because of its benefits in product, performance and recycling.
Polystyrene is one of the most widely used kinds of plastic. It is a polymer made from the monomer styrene, a liquid hydrocarbon that is commercially manufactured from petroleum by the chemical industry. Polystyrene is a thermoplastic substance, it melts if heated and becomes solid again when cool.