Insight Polymers & Compounding Unveils New Conductive Products Line
The new conductive products line will also be produced for injection molding and extrusion.
Source: Insight Polymers & Compounding
A new line of conductive and static dissipative products initially targeted for additive manufacturing pellet printing has been launched by . Moreover, the company plans to translate its success with the additive manufacturing compounds into injection molding and extrusion, and back these offerings with technical support and testing services.
Says Matt Torosian, the newly hired Insight Polymers sales and market development manager who will lead the effort, “Our new products and services comprise compounding for reactive polymer modification as well as conductive, wear and friction, and structural materials for vertical markets such as electronics, industrial, medical and consumer applications. Plus, we can meet material requirements and unmet needs with technical capabilities such as reactive extrusion, polymer modification and advanced conductive materials that utilize carbon nanotubes, graphene and conductive carbon.”
According Insight Polymers director of operations A.J. Pasquale, the company can dial in essential physical and conductive properties, and validate the results with new testing capabilities.
Related Content
-
420 Stainless Steel Now Qualified With TrueShape 3D Printing Technology
NPE2024: Mantle's additive manufacturing technology is designed for precision tooling.
-
The Connector Conundrum: 3D Printed Mold Tooling’s Role in Innovation
ReelView Fishing faced an electronics obstacle in the development of its new technology for underwater video. Additive manufacturing for moldmaking allowed for the speed necessary to iterate to a solution. How inventors and invention will benefit from new ways of obtaining production-ready tooling.
-
Freeform Injection Molding Eases the Path to Medical Device Product Testing
A development and manufacturing service provider is using dissolvable molds to build injection molded silicone prototypes.