Title: Adhesives and bonded structures
1Adhesives and bonded structures
2Outline of lecture
- Adhesive systems
- Anaerobic adhesives
- Cyanoacrylates
- Epoxies
- Phenolics
- Polyurethanes
- Others
- Good joint design
- Surface preparation
- Co-curing
3Anaerobic adhesives
- acrylic-based adhesives
- normally cure in
- the presence of metal, and
- the absence of air (specifically atmospheric
oxygen). - normally used as thin layers for locking or
sealing - rapid cure time
- complementary to the cyanoacrylates.
4Cyanoacrylates
- acrylic-based adhesives
- require moisture as a vital catalyst
- almost instantaneous curing
- normally used as thin layers
- complementary to the anaerobics
5Epoxies
- Epoxide resin plus hardener
- usually two-part system
- premixed single part epoxy adhesives available.
- good adhesion to many materials
- high strength
- can be used for thicker joints
6Phenolics
- phenol-formaldehyde resin systems
- one of the earliest synthetic adhesives
- still good performance in severe environments.
- health and safety issues
- formaldehyde considered carcinogenic
- phenols are acidic
- specialised equipment required
- complex procedures required.
7Polyurethanes
- polyurethane chemistry
- usually isocyanate and alcohol
- isocyanates haverigorous health and safety
requirements. - good for load-bearing applications in dry
conditions - susceptible to attack by moisture.
8Other adhesive systems
- ultraviolet light curing systems
- plastisols
- based on PVC dispersions
- rubber solutions
- solvent evaporation effects bonding
- toughened adhesives
- any of the above families of adhesive
- incorporation of low molecular weight rubbers
- chemically incorporated in the polymer backbone,
or - physical particles.
9Use of adhesives
- Adhesives can bond
- most materials in common engineering use
- especially useful where the substrates are
different materials. - For optimum bonding, avoid
- materials with weak or loose surface layers
- materials troubled by water migration,solvent
attack and/or stress cracking.
10Advantages of adhesivescf welding, brazing,
soldering or mechanical fasteners
- lower temperature manufacture of joints
- joints without blemish, distortion or protrusions
- net weight of the joint is minimised
- stresses are more uniformly distributed
- resulting structure is normally stiffer than for
discretely welded/fastened joints - increased fatigue life
- complex geometries relatively easy to make
- reduced capital and labour costs
- process de-skilled or completely automated
11Good joint design
- essential for highly-stressed applications
- bonded joints
- are best loaded in compression
- give acceptable performance in shear
- tension should be avoided
- especially peel at least one component is
flexible - and cleavage rigid components are involved.
12Correct joint design ... redrawn from diagrams
in The Permabond Engineers Guide to Adhesives
- Compression good Shear OK
??
?
13Wrong joint design... redrawn from diagrams in
The Permabond Engineers Guide to Adhesives
- Peel (1 flexible) Cleavage (2
rigid)
x
14Joint design... redrawn from diagrams in The
Permabond Engineers Guide to Adhesives
X
?
?
?
?
?
15Joint design... redrawn from diagrams in The
Permabond Engineers Guide to Adhesives
X
?
?
?
16Surface preparation
- Surface preparation
- crucial to the achievement of a good bond
- for composites normally includes a
degrease-abrade-degrease-dry sequence. - shot-blasting to abrade surface is inappropriate
- tends to remove too much substrate.
- plastic bead blasting (or similar blast media)
permits greater control of material removal.
17Surface preparation
- wetting of the substrate by liquid depends onthe
interfacial tensions for the three phases - solid/liquid (SL)
- liquid/vapour (LV)
- solid/vapour (SV)
- contact angle of lt90 will result in wetting
- the substrate is hydrophilic when the liquid is
water - contact angle gt90 will not result in wetting
- the substrate is hydrophobic when liquid is water
18Surface preparation
- contact angle for smooth surfacedescribed by
Young's equation - Wenzel modified Young's equationto include
roughness
19Co-curing
- For adhesively bonded composite components,
co-curing is often adopted - simultaneous post-cure of the laminate, and
- cure of the adhesive