Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Durability underwater adhesives

The question of the durability of adhesive joints in the underwater environment is clearly one of great importance because water is widely recognized as a major threat to their... [Pg.567]

Underwater adhesives J M LANE Wetting problems pre-treatments durability... [Pg.660]

Tyre cord adhesion W J VAN OOIJ Adhesion to brass-coated steel Underwater adhesives J M LANE Wetting problems pre-tteatments durability... [Pg.670]

Perhaps, the earlier materials found to have a useful capacity for adhesive bonding underwater depended upon the use of a stoichiometric excess of water-scavenging polyamide hardener in an epoxide-based adhesive. This approach can lead to the production of effective joints in the short term, but formulations of this type, which are hydrophilic in the uncured state, are also likely to absorb significant amounts of water in the cured condition. It is a widely accepted view that the extent of joint weakening in susceptible joints, quite apart from the consequences of plasticization, is a function of the water-uptake characteristics of the adhesive (see Glass transition temperature). The consequence is therefore likely to be that such joints will show poor durability in the presence of water, when rapid uptake of water may lead to equally rapid degradation of both cohesive and interfacial properties (see Durability fundamentals). [Pg.565]

The durability of epoxy-aluminium joints that used a homopolymerised epoxy resin was studied by researchers based in Spain [15], and the effects of relative humidity, temperature, and salt concentration analysed. The homopolymerised epoxy resin absorbed little water (1.5 wt%) because of its non-polar network structure. Increasing relative humidity and temperature enhanced water uptake, but the joint strength remained constant because of epoxy plasticisation. A saline environment was damaging to the adhesive joints because of metal corrosion, but was not significantly harmful to the epoxy resin because of the lower diffusion coefficient of salt water. The decrease in glass transition temperature of the epoxy adhesive due to water absorption was dependent upon only the amount of absorbed water and was independent of hydrothermal ageing conditions. The durability of epoxy adhesive joints made underwater has been studied [16]. [Pg.139]


See other pages where Durability underwater adhesives is mentioned: [Pg.795]    [Pg.217]    [Pg.579]    [Pg.861]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.690]    [Pg.690]    [Pg.1256]   


SEARCH



Underwater adhesives

© 2024 chempedia.info