Composites Design and Manufacture (BEng) - MATS 324
Adhesives and bonded structures.

PowerPoint presentation (66 KB)

This teaching support material complements that in lecture C10: Machining, bonding and repair.

Adhesives come in a variety of types, usually distinguished by the chemistry used [1, 2]:

The above is not an exhaustive list.  For example other variants include plastisols (based on PVC dispersions) and rubber solutions (where solvent evaporation effect bonding).  In particular, toughened adhesives may be any of the above families of adhesive with the incorporation of low molecular weight rubbers (either chemically incorporated in the polymer backbone or as physical particles).

Adhesives can bond most materials in common engineering use and are especially useful where the substrates are different materials.  For optimum bonding, avoid:

The advantages of adhesives (compared to welding, brazing, soldering or mechanical fasteners) are:

Good joint design is essential for highly-stressed applications.  Bonded joints are best loaded in compression and give acceptable performance in shear.  Tension, especially peel (where at least one component is flexible) and cleavage (where rigid components are involved) should be avoided [3].  See pages 15-16 of reference [2] or page 50 of reference [3] for illustrations of acceptable and unacceptable bad designs for adhesively bonded joints (or the PowerPoint presentation for this lecture: slides 12-15).

Surface preparation is crucial to the achievement of a good bond and for composites normally includes a degrease-abrade-degrease-dry sequence.  The creation of a good bond depends critically on the adhesive wetting the substrate surface.  The wetting of a solid by a liquid depends on the relationship between the interfacial tensions for the three phases: solid/liquid (SL), liquid/vapour (LV) and solid/vapour (SV). The contact angle for a liquid on a given smooth surface is described by Young's equation [4]. A contact angle of <90° will result in wetting (the fluid is hydrophilic when the liquid is water).   A contact angle >90° will not result in wetting (the fluid is hydrophobic when the liquid is water).  Wenzel [5] recognized that the quality of the surface affects the surface wetting properties and modified Young's equation to include roughness as an additional factor.  The Young (left) and Wenzel (right) equations are:

               

where θγ is Young’s contact angle,  θW is Wenzel’s contact angle, γSL, γLV and γSV are the interfacial energies per unit area for the solid-liquid (SL), liquid-vapor (LV), solid-vapor (SV) interfaces respectively and r is the the roughness factor (the ratio of the actual area of a rough surface to the geometric projected area).  Marmur [6] has presented a useful summary of the issues arising during the measurement and interpretation of contact angles.

The use of shot-blasting to abrade the surface is inappropriate: it tends to remove too much substrate.  Plastic bead blasting (or similar blast media) permits greater control of material removal.  For adhesively bonded composite components, co-curing is often adopted: the substrate and the adhesive joint are cured simultaneously.

The National Physical Laboratory has an on-line Adhesive Design Toolkit.

The Araldite/Huntsman Advanced Materials website offers the following documents:

The Loctite website offers the following documents:

The Permabond Engineering Adhesives website offers pages on:

This link lists some major suppliers of adhesives.

References

  1. RD Adams (editor), Adhesive Bonding - science, technology and applications, Woodhead Publishing, Cambridge, 2005.  ISBN 1-85573-741-8.  CRC Press, Boca Raton - USA, 2005.  ISBN 0 8493 2584 6.  UOP Library
  2. Permabond Adhesives Limited, The Engineers Guide to Adhesives, no date (circa 1990).
  3. WA Lees, Adhesives and the Engineer, Mechanical Engineering Publications, 1989.  ISBN 0-85298-703-X.  UOP Library
  4. T Young, An Essay on the Cohesion of Fluids, Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 1805, 95, 65-87. (Free access to 3244 KB PDF file)
  5. RN Wenzel. Surface roughness and contact angle, Journal of Physical and Colloid Chemistry, 1949, 53, 1466-7.
  6. Abraham Marmur, Soft contact: measurement and interpretation of contact angles, Soft Matter, 2006, 2, 12-17

Videos:

Further reading

Click here for TalisList

 Hot-linked references may only return an abstract, which will allow you to judge the relevance of the paper to your work.
 Should you need to login to access the full publication, then it is recommended that you use TalisList with Athens authentication.

Return to MATS 324 home page
Updated by John Summerscales on 06 March 2012 10:15. Terms and conditions. Errors and omissions. Corrections.