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Surface preparation adhesion

To assess the advantages of the weldbonded joint, one must look at the properties of the spot weld alone, the adhesive bond alone, and compare these to the properties of the weldbonded joint. One must also be aware of the physical and environmental effects on the joint. Studies show that weldbonded joints can be stronger than joints that are only spot welded or only adhesively bonded. However, metal thickness, surface preparation, adhesive flow and cohesion, and weld quality can influence the results. [Pg.284]

Because of the large number of factors that influence the durability of adhesive-bonded joints, a durability test should be conducted on all systems before they are selected for any particular application. This test should include the adherends, surface preparation, adhesive, and cure parameters needed for each application. ... [Pg.233]

Because the efficiency of the connection will generally depend to a large extent on the workmanship, care must be taken that the process is representative of that which will be found in practice. For example, drilled holes should be within specified tolerances, but not necessarily to tighter tolerances, while surface preparation, adhesive application and curing should be carried out under realistic conditions. Ideally the skill of the personnel making the connection should be similar to that encountered in practice. [Pg.534]

Control of surface preparation, adhesive preparation, assembly environment and curing procedure important for consistent Joint quality. [Pg.234]

Process validation is carried out through demonstrators where the different bonded parts dedicated are manufactured to scale 1 and the bonding implementation defined surface preparation, adhesive conditioning, film implementation or multiparts mixing, tooling... [Pg.1166]

Definition of Surface Preparation, Adhesives, and Adhesive Bonding... [Pg.16]

An important newer use of fluorine is in the preparation of a polymer surface for adhesives (qv) or coatings (qv). In this apphcation the surfaces of a variety of polymers, eg, EPDM mbber, polyethylene—vinyl acetate foams, and mbber tine scrap, that are difficult or impossible to prepare by other methods are easily and quickly treated. Fluorine surface preparation, unlike wet-chemical surface treatment, does not generate large amounts of hazardous wastes and has been demonstrated to be much more effective than plasma or corona surface treatments. Figure 5 details the commercially available equipment for surface treating plastic components. Equipment to continuously treat fabrics, films, sheet foams, and other web materials is also available. [Pg.131]

Surface preparation, always important in obtaining optimal coatings performance, is critical for marine coatings (see Metal surface treatments). Surface preparation usually comprises about half of the total coating costs, and if inadequate may be responsible for early coating failure. Proper surface preparation includes cleaning to remove contaminants and roughening the surface to faciUtate adhesion. [Pg.364]

The seemingly simple question of the relation the characteristics of a mechanically prepared metal surface and adhesion to that surface has sporadically occupied attention for many decades without any very general conclusion being reached [69]. In some recent work, Amada et al. [70,71] grit-blasted a steel substrate, varying the angle between the gun and the specimen surface, and measured the adhesion of a plasma-sprayed alumina coating. They examined profiles of the... [Pg.336]

Rider and Amott were able to produce notable improvements in bond durability in comparison with simple abrasion pre-treatments. In some cases, the pretreatment improved joint durability to the level observed with the phosphoric acid anodizing process. The development of aluminum platelet structure in the outer film region combined with the hydrolytic stability of adhesive bonds made to the epoxy silane appear to be critical in developing the bond durability observed. XPS was particularly useful in determining the composition of fracture surfaces after failure as a function of boiling-water treatment time. A key feature of the treatment is that the adherend surface prepared in the boiling water be treated by the silane solution directly afterwards. Given the adherend is still wet before immersion in silane solution, the potential for atmospheric contamination is avoided. Rider and Amott have previously shown that such exposure is detrimental to bond durability. [Pg.427]

The surface preparation must enable and promote the formation of bonds across the adherend/primer-adhesive interface. These bonds may be chemical (covalent, acid-base, van der Waals, hydrogen, etc.), physical (mechanical interlocking), diffusional (not likely with adhesive bonding to metals), or some combination of these (Chapters 7-9). [Pg.947]

In early studies, the durability of Ti-6A1-4V bondments was determined as a function of surface preparation for several adherend preparations and several adhesives... [Pg.981]

Direct bonding. In many high-volume production applications (i.e., the automotive and appliance industries), elaborate surface preparation of steel ad-herends is undesirable or impossible. Thus, there has been widespread interest in bonding directly to steel coil surfaces that contain various protective oils [55,56,113-116], Debski et al. proposed that epoxy adhesives, particularly those curing at high temperatures, could form suitable bonds to oily steel surfaces by two mechanisms (1) thermodynamic displacement of the oil from the steel surface, and (2) absorption of the oil into the bulk adhesives [55,56]. The relative importance of these two mechanisms depends on the polarity of the oil and the surface area/volume ratio of the adhesive (which can be affected by adherend surface roughness). [Pg.984]

Wegman, R.F., Surface Preparation Techniques for Adhesive Bonding. Noyes Publications, Park Ridge, NJ, 1989. [Pg.1005]

Mazza, J.J. and Kuhbander, R.J., Grit blast/silane (GBS) aluminum surface preparation for structural adhesive bonding, WL-TR-94-4111. Materials Laboratory, Air Force Materiel Command, September 1999. [Pg.1005]

Effects on lap shear strength of EB-cured epoxy adhesives from different surface preparations on aluminum and composite adherends... [Pg.1020]

The final section in this volume deals with applications of adhesion science. The applications described include methods by which durable adhesive bonds can be manufactured by the use of appropriate surface preparation (Davis and Venables) to unique methods for composite repair (Lopata et al.) Adhesive applications find their way into the generation of wood products (Dunky and Pizzi) and also find their way into the construction of commercial and military aircraft (Pate). The chapter by Spotnitz et al. shows that adhesion science finds its way into the life sciences in their discussion of tissue adhesives. [Pg.1216]

Application of protective paints consists of surface preparation of steel, priming coat and finishing coats. Wherever possible, steel should be blast-cleaned before painting. Primers thoroughly wet the metal to promote adhesion of finishing paints and carry inhibitive pigments. For example, red lead oxide will minimize the spread of rust on metal surfaces. The total thickness of fmishing coats must be at least 0.125 mm for adequate protection and life. Four coats of paint usually are necessary to achieve this. [Pg.123]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.101 ]




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