dipcoat
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Noun
[edit]dipcoat (plural dipcoats)
- A coating that is applied by immersing an object in a liquid, often applied to prevent corrosion.
- 1952, Rawson L. Wood, Investment Castings for Engineers, page 144:
- The dipcoat is sprayed with a coarse sand while it is still wet.
- 1969, The Foundry Trade Journal - Volume 126, page 519:
- From the practical point-of-view, the basis of the investigation was that one should apply the primary dipcoat to pattern-assemblies using two different dipcoat-viscosities, two pattern-washing techniques, and two methods of draining the...
- 1969, Industrial Arts & Vocational Education - Volume 58, page 37:
- To assure adherence of the dipcoat to the wax, prewetting in a suitable agent to remove mold parting lubricant and microscopically roughen the wax surface may be necessary.
- 1990, LeRoy D. Hart, Esther Lense, Alumina chemicals: science and technology handbook, →ISBN, page 514:
- If one or more of the slurry components reacts with the silica binder, dipcoat gellation may occur.
- 2009, NPCS Board of Consultants & Engineers, Handbook on Paints and Enamels, →ISBN, page 234:
- Recommended application is by spray, dipcoat, or roller.
Verb
[edit]dipcoat (third-person singular simple present dipcoats, present participle dipcoating, simple past and past participle dipcoated)
- Alternative form of dip-coat
- 2002, M. Cahay, Advanced Luminescent Materials and Quantum Confinement II, →ISBN:
- Glass plates of (1x3) cm2 were dipcoated 15 times from the ZnS:Mn2+ suspension at a lift-rate of 0.5 mm/s while the suspension was slowly stirred.
- 2005, James Duncan, Medical Image Computing and Computer-Assisted Intervention MICCAI, →ISBN, page 931:
- Correlation between thickeness of membrane and withdrawing velocity in dipcoating fabrication process
- 2014, Abraham J. Domb, Wahid Khan, Focal Controlled Drug Delivery, →ISBN, page 418:
- The easiest approach to incorporating drugs into electrospun fibers is to dipcoat the fibrous constructs (mats, tubes, etc.) into appropriate organic or inorganic solvents that contain the drug in question.