Tungsten carbide is the liner material most often used for mineral abrasives.
Some of the listed liner materials are what the company refers to as "water based, non-toxic polymers" which is generically vague.
Because it is a small molecule, hydrogen tends to diffuse through any liner material intended to contain it, leading to the embrittlement, or weakening, of its container.
As the cells are filled, they will be covered by more than 300 feet of liner material and red bed clay and the surface will be restored to its natural state.
With a zipper like sound, the liner material tore away from the gun sight.
The liner material used for common sizes is normally a felted fabric (weave) and does not go around bends well without wrinkling and going out of round on corners.
Since the magnetic field reduces particle transport, the field insulates the target from the liner material.
In early antitank weapons, copper was used as a liner material.
The jet tip velocity depends on bulk sound velocity in the liner material, the time to particulation is dependent on the ductility of the material.
Typical liner materials are: