Material Intuition
  • Our background
    • The CRIM Framework
  • Materials Workshops
  • The Library
  • Contact
PLA280-3-545x400
0
By James Burchill Materials Plastics Smart Materials

02 Mar: D3O

Read More
3d printed sugar
0 0
By James Burchill Articles Ceramics Composite Materials Metals Other Plastics

16 Mar: Materials for 3D printing

3D printing has come a long way quickly, new materials keeps being added to those that can be printed with…

Read More
selfreinforcedpolymer
0 0
By James Burchill Cover Materials Plastics

06 Apr: Curv self-reinforced polypropylene

  An interesting take on fibre reinforced materials, this polypropylene sheet is reinforced with a lattice structure made from polypropylene.

Read More
Self healing polymer
0 0
By James Burchill Cover Materials Plastics Smart Materials

28 Jan: Plastics that heal themselves?

How can a material heal itself back to it’s original state, fixing scratches and sealing small holes? Well for some polymers…

Read More
fiberline cover
0 0
By James Burchill Composite Materials Plastics

21 Oct: Fiberline (Glass reinforced plastic)

Polyester reinforced with layers of carefully aligned glass fibre.

Read More
Eco film cover
0 0
By James Burchill Materials Plastics

14 Oct: Eco film

Eco film is a broad term for a type of film that completely degrades in cool water. The material is…

Read More
lifocork cover
0 0
By James Burchill Composite Materials Organic Plastics

14 Oct: Lifocork

Lifocork is a plastic that contains shredded cork to gives it a nice cork texture and reduces the use of…

Read More
UPM formi
0 0
By James Burchill Materials Plastics

13 Oct: UPM Formi

Polypropylene filled with 30-50% natural fibre, making stonger and stiffer than most plastics

Read More
Rape seed
0 0
By James Burchill Cover Materials Plastics

09 Oct: Arnitel® ECO

Up to 50% of this stretch plastic is derived from rapeseed oil but it remains a strong and flexible plastic capable…

Read More
Coolmorph Banner
0 0
By James Burchill Cover Materials Plastics

09 Oct: Cool Morph (Modified Polycaprolactone)

Plastic with a melting point of 42°C allowing forming. Allows forming at low temperatures and easy remoulding.

Read More
1 2
  • Contact & Services
  • Articles
  • Materials
  • Links
2020 © Copyrights CodexThemes