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Adhesive
Technology
From
shoes to space ships - adhesives perform the fundamental function
of holding things together. But that's not as simple as it sounds.
For a workable understanding of adhesion and its benefits and limitations,
knowledge of the fundamentals is essential.
Adhesion
vs. stress...
A fundamental of the technology
One of the common laboratory tests to measure adhesive performance
is to "pull at" or stress the bond. The purpose is to
see at what point stress overcomes adhesion and the bond breaks.
With some adhesives, the materials stretch or break before the adhesive
bond.
Adhesion
vs. Stress that's what a great deal of adhesive technology
is all about.
Adhesion
is the force that holds materials together. There are three basic
types:
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| 1) |
SPECIFIC
ADHESIONis the molecular attraction between contacting surfaces. |
| 2) |
MECHANICAL
ADHESIONoccurs when an adhesive is applied to rough or porous
surfaces. |
| 3) |
EFFECTIVE
ADHESIONcombines specific and mechanical adhesion for optimum
strength. |
| Stress,
on the other hand, is the force pulling materials apart. The basic
types of stress in adhesive technology are: |
| 1) |
TENSILE"Pull"
is exerted equally over the entire joint. "Pull direction"
is straight and away from the adhesive bond. All adhesive contributes
to bond strength. |
| 2) |
SHEAR"Pull
direction" is across the adhesive bond. The bonded materials
are being forced to slide over each other. All adhesive contributes
to bond strength. |
| 3) |
CLEAVAGE"Pull"
is concentrated at one edge of the joint and exerts a prying force
on the bond. The other edge of the joint is theoretically under zero
stress. |
| 4) |
PEELOne
surface must be flexible. Stress is concentrated along a thin line
at the edge of the bond. This line is the exact point where an adhesive
would separate if the flexible surface were peeled away from its mating
surface. Once peeling has begun, the "stress line" would
stay out in front of the advancing bond separation. |
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| Most
adhesives perform better when the primary stress is tensile or shear.
However, in most industrial applications, a combination of stresses
are involved. For best performance the entire bond area should carry
the bulk of the stress. |
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