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  2. Mineral wool - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mineral_wool

    Mineral wool is any fibrous material formed by spinning or drawing molten mineral or rock materials such as slag and ceramics. [1] Applications of mineral wool include thermal insulation (as both structural insulation and pipe insulation), filtration, soundproofing, and hydroponic growth medium.

  3. Wool insulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wool_insulation

    Wool insulation commonly comes in rolls of batts or ropes with varied widths and thicknesses depending on the manufacturer. Generally, wool batts have thicknesses of 50 mm (2 in) to 100mm (4 in), with widths of 400 mm (16 in) and 600 mm (24 in), and lengths of 4000 mm (13 ft 4 in), 5000 mm (16 ft 8 in), 6000 mm (20 ft) and 7200 mm (24 ft).

  4. Building insulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Building_insulation

    In a narrow sense, insulation can just refer to the insulation materials employed to slow heat loss, such as: cellulose, glass wool, rock wool, polystyrene, polyurethane foam, vermiculite, perlite, wood fiber, plant fiber (cannabis, flax, cotton, cork, etc.), recycled cotton denim, straw, animal fiber (sheep's wool), cement, and earth or soil ...

  5. Inside the plan for a massive WA insulation plant to spin ...

    www.aol.com/inside-plan-massive-wa-insulation...

    It sells its products of varying insulation values under the Rockwool name. It all starts with the same recipe: Gravel, high heat, spinning molten material in a giant candy cotton machine.

  6. Molten rock into insulation? See how a WA plant will make the ...

    www.aol.com/molten-rock-insulation-see-wa...

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  7. Thermal insulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_insulation

    In order to accomplish small gas cell formation in man-made thermal insulation, glass and polymer materials can be used to trap air in a foam-like structure. This principle is used industrially in building and piping insulation such as , cellulose, rock wool, polystyrene foam (styrofoam), urethane foam, vermiculite, perlite, and cork. Trapping ...