Adhesives Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Adhesives stocks.

Adhesives Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
Oct 2 HON Will Honeywell International (HON) Beat Estimates Again in Its Next Earnings Report?
Oct 2 HON These 3 Bargain-Bin Dividend Value Stocks Have Become Too Cheap to Ignore
Oct 2 HON The Zacks Analyst Blog Highlights Honeywell International, Accenture, City Holding and First United
Oct 2 APD China and Middle East tensions push commodities into the spotlight: Morning Brief
Oct 1 HON Honeywell International Inc. (HON) Stock Moves -0.31%: What You Should Know
Oct 1 MMM 3M introduces WorkTunes Connect + Solar Hearing Protector, a first-of-its-kind continuous solar charging headset for consumers
Oct 1 HON Honeywell, Chevron to team up for AI breakthrough in refining processes
Oct 1 HON Time to Buy These 4 Stocks With Risking Dividend Yields?
Oct 1 HON Chevron, Honeywell Join Forces For AI Breakthrough: Details
Oct 1 MMM XLI: GEV, BLDR among industrial gainers during Q3, Boeing top laggard
Oct 1 APD Air Products Completes Sale of LNG Business to Honeywell for $1.81B
Oct 1 APD Honeywell Acquires Air Products' LNG Process Business for $1.81B
Oct 1 HON Honeywell Acquires Air Products' LNG Process Business for $1.81B
Oct 1 HON Honeywell completes $1.81bn buyout of Air Products’ LNG division
Oct 1 APD Honeywell completes $1.81bn buyout of Air Products’ LNG division
Oct 1 HON Honeywell completes acquisition of Air Products’ LNG process tech for $1.81B
Oct 1 HON HONEYWELL AND CHEVRON COLLABORATE ON AI-ASSISTED SOLUTIONS FOR REFINING PROCESSES
Oct 1 EMN Is There An Opportunity With Eastman Chemical Company's (NYSE:EMN) 37% Undervaluation?
Oct 1 MMM 3 US Stocks Estimated To Be Undervalued In October 2024
Oct 1 MMM 3M's Transformation Uncertain: A Wait-And-See Approach
Adhesives

An adhesive, also known as glue, cement, mucilage, or paste, is any non metallic substance applied to one surface, or both surfaces, of two separate items that binds them together and resists their separation. Adjectives may be used in conjunction with the word "adhesive" to describe properties based on the substance's physical or chemical form, the type of materials joined, or conditions under which it is applied.The use of adhesives offers many advantages over binding techniques such as sewing, mechanical fastening, thermal bonding, etc. These include the ability to bind different materials together, to distribute stress more efficiently across the joint, the cost effectiveness of an easily mechanized process, an improvement in aesthetic design, and increased design flexibility. Disadvantages of adhesive use include decreased stability at high temperatures, relative weakness in bonding large objects with a small bonding surface area, and greater difficulty in separating objects during testing. Adhesives are typically organized by the method of adhesion. These are then organized into reactive and non-reactive adhesives, which refers to whether the adhesive chemically reacts in order to harden. Alternatively they can be organized by whether the raw stock is of natural or synthetic origin, or by their starting physical phase.
Adhesives may be found naturally or produced synthetically. The earliest human use of adhesive-like substances was approximately 200,000 years ago, when Neanderthals produced tar from the dry distillation of birch bark for use in binding stone tools to wooden handles. The first references to adhesives in literature first appeared in approximately 2000 BC. The Greeks and Romans made great contributions to the development of adhesives. In Europe, glue was not widely used until the period AD 1500–1700. From then until the 1900s increases in adhesive use and discovery were relatively gradual. Only since the last century has the development of synthetic adhesives accelerated rapidly, and innovation in the field continues to the present.

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