dipcoat

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See also: dip-coat, and dip coat

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From dip +‎ coat.

Noun

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dipcoat (plural dipcoats)

  1. 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

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dipcoat (third-person singular simple present dipcoats, present participle dipcoating, simple past and past participle dipcoated)

  1. 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.

Anagrams

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