[NewCandle] Rolled Al hydrolysis
Nick Reiter
avalonbiker at yahoo.com
Mon Mar 19 13:36:48 EST 2007
Hmmmm... Ya, Coors Ceramics (Coorstek) is pretty well
known. I've done business with them through my
company for a number of years. They sell lots of
engineered alumina, mullite, cordierite, tubes,
labware, etc. Bought lots of their stuff - they are
nice folks to work with. May have been another Coors
spinoff company that was working on proton conducting
ceramics, cause I know they (Coorstek ) don't have
such in their regular catalogs.
n
--- Jones Beene <jonesb9 at pacbell.net> wrote:
> Looks like the company has been born again...
>
> http://www.coorstek.com/
>
> > A promising potential solution to the membrane
> problem was a company in
> > Boulder founded by one of the Coors clan. It was
> call "Protonetics" or
> > something like that, but went belly up. Efficient
> proton conductor
> > ceramics are the holy grail of water
> electrochemistry. I guess that
> > Coors did not have his fair share of the brewery
> stock. There is much
> > talk about nano materials, but it is generally
> impossible to get hold of
> > them without major financing.
>
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