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Bloom (phase)

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74:. Many polymers are essentially pure hydrocarbons whereas additives are often significantly more polar, this results their being forced out via hydrophobic forces. The blooming of additives may be desirable or undesirable. For example, the migration of antioxidants to the polymer surface may help it resist degradation. Conversely, the leaching of additives from packaging materials into foods, or the blooming of additives in biomedical devices is often of high concern. Regulations exist in many counties that require both the levels of blooming and the materials involved to be of a safe level, for example the international symbol for materials approved for 59: 98:. Blooming is undesirable in rubber processing. When sulfur bloom appears before vulcanization, the rubber is deprived of the crosslinking agent. Sulfur bloom after vulcanization indicates incomplete vulcanization. To prevent sulfur blooming, rubber industry utilizes amorphous, polymeric forms of sulfur referred to as "insoluble sulfur" for 121:
Chocolate bloom refers two types of whitish coating that can appear on the surface of chocolate: fat bloom, caused by changes in the fat crystals in the chocolate; and sugar bloom, due to crystals formed by the action of moisture on the sugar. Chocolate that has "bloomed" remains edible but may have
102:. It remains insoluble in uncured rubber, thereby preventing migration and blooming. In rubber processing, ingredients other than sulfur can also "bloom", including antioxidants, fatty acids, and accelerators. 175:
Nouman, Micheal; Saunier, Johanna; Jubeli, Emile; Yagoubi, Najet (September 2017). "Additive blooming in polymer materials: Consequences in the pharmaceutical and medical field".
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EU food contact material symbol: used for marking materials intended to come into contact with food in the European Union as defined in regulation (EC) No 1935/2004
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refers to the migration of one component of a solid mixture to the surface of an article. The process is an example of
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Wręczycki, Jakub; Bieliński, Dariusz M.; Anyszka, Rafał (5 August 2018).
87: 94:, to the surface of a rubber article either before or after 174: 150:
Zweifel, Hans; Maier, Ralph D.; Schiller, Michael (2009).
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Rubber Compounding: Principles: Materials, and Techniques
229:"Sulfur/Organic Copolymers as Curing Agents for Rubber" 149: 283: 201: 262: 244: 122:an unappetizing appearance and texture. 86:Sulfur bloom refers to the migration of 57: 14: 284: 189:10.1016/j.polymdegradstab.2017.07.021 66:Blooming is commonly encountered in 53: 78:is a wine glass and a fork symbol. 24: 110: 25: 313: 177:Polymer Degradation and Stability 154:(6th ed.). Munich: Hanser. 105: 81: 220: 206:(Second ed.). M. Dekker. 195: 168: 143: 13: 1: 137: 7: 152:Plastics additives handbook 125: 10: 318: 114: 202:Barlow, Fred W. (1993). 50:or phase aggregation. 63: 246:10.3390/polym10080870 61: 100:sulfur vulcanisation 64: 302:Polymer chemistry 161:978-3-446-40801-2 68:polymer additives 54:Materials science 36:materials science 32:polymer chemistry 16:(Redirected from 309: 277: 276: 266: 248: 224: 218: 217: 199: 193: 192: 172: 166: 165: 147: 48:phase separation 21: 317: 316: 312: 311: 310: 308: 307: 306: 282: 281: 280: 225: 221: 214: 200: 196: 173: 169: 162: 148: 144: 140: 128: 119: 117:Chocolate bloom 113: 111:Chocolate bloom 108: 93: 84: 56: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 315: 305: 304: 299: 294: 279: 278: 219: 212: 194: 167: 160: 141: 139: 136: 135: 134: 127: 124: 115:Main article: 112: 109: 107: 104: 91: 90:, usually as S 83: 80: 55: 52: 27:Chemical event 26: 18:Bloom (sulfur) 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 314: 303: 300: 298: 295: 293: 290: 289: 287: 274: 270: 265: 260: 256: 252: 247: 242: 238: 234: 230: 223: 215: 209: 205: 198: 190: 186: 182: 178: 171: 163: 157: 153: 146: 142: 133: 132:Efflorescence 130: 129: 123: 118: 103: 101: 97: 96:vulcanization 89: 79: 77: 73: 69: 60: 51: 49: 45: 41: 37: 33: 19: 236: 232: 222: 203: 197: 180: 176: 170: 151: 145: 120: 106:Food science 85: 82:Sulfur bloom 76:food contact 65: 43: 40:food science 29: 183:: 239–252. 72:stabilizers 286:Categories 239:(8): 870. 213:0824789687 138:References 255:2073-4360 273:30960795 233:Polymers 126:See also 70:such as 264:6403713 297:Sulfur 292:Rubber 271:  261:  253:  210:  158:  88:sulfur 38:, and 44:bloom 269:PMID 251:ISSN 208:ISBN 156:ISBN 259:PMC 241:doi 185:doi 181:143 30:In 288:: 267:. 257:. 249:. 237:10 235:. 231:. 179:. 42:, 34:, 275:. 243:: 216:. 191:. 187:: 164:. 92:8 20:)

Index

Bloom (sulfur)
polymer chemistry
materials science
food science
phase separation

polymer additives
stabilizers
food contact
sulfur
vulcanization
sulfur vulcanisation
Chocolate bloom
Efflorescence
ISBN
978-3-446-40801-2
doi
10.1016/j.polymdegradstab.2017.07.021
ISBN
0824789687
"Sulfur/Organic Copolymers as Curing Agents for Rubber"
doi
10.3390/polym10080870
ISSN
2073-4360
PMC
6403713
PMID
30960795
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