Adhesive Materials Checklist:: What To Know When Bonding Rubber Adhesives
Adhesive Materials Checklist:: What To Know When Bonding Rubber Adhesives
Adhesive Materials Checklist:: What To Know When Bonding Rubber Adhesives
When you approach a manufacturer about material bonding, they’ll ask you a number of questions about the
project. Coming to the table ready with answers will help the entire process — from initial product catalog
selection to delivery — run smoothly, efficiently, and on budget.
We’ve created a checklist to help you come prepared to meet with a prospective manufacturer about your
new project.
Click on each question to find solutions and suggestions for your project.
Are you willing to prepare the Must it meet any reliability or quality
surfaces? requirements?
What types of stress will be exerted What is the surface type of the material to
on the adhesive? which it’s being bonded?
What are the dimensions of the Are there any special storage conditions?
bonding area?
The answers to these common questions will play a large role determining the adhesive, or
adhesives, that will best suit your application. Being prepared with detailed information will help
to ease the entire process. Here’s what you need to know:
Does your product require rubber to metal bonding? Metals such as aluminum or stainless steel are high surface
energy, but once the metal is powder coated, you will be bonding to a low surface energy “skin”. As with any other
bonding scenario, the more specific you can be the more helpful it is to the manufacturer.
Degreasing is important for any component that must be bonded with another. Parts naturally pick up grease during
the production process, which in turn picks up dirt, dust, and other contaminants. Both grease and particulates
caught in grease are serious detriments to proper bonding.
Other surface preparation treatments include abrasion, flame treatment, “Degreasing is important
plasma treatment, and a range of chemical treatments. The type of for any component that
treatment or treatments your part requires depends on its material, and must be bonded with
plays a part in dictating which adhesives or adhesive methods can be used. another.”
An inability or unwillingness to perform required surface preparations can severely limit your adhesive options,
require subcontracting, or add to the cost of bonding.
Peel stress
Peel stress is encountered by an adhesive when forces pull
bonded components in opposite directions at an edge in a
peeling motion
Shear stress
Shear stress is stress that is placed on components parallel to the
adhesive plane; for example, one component with leftward force
and the second with rightward force
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Cleavage stress
Cleavage stress occurs when forces are applied at one edge of a
bonded component in a prying motion
While some adhesives are suitable for attachment and bonding purposes only, many can serve a number of
purposes: thermal or electrical insulation, thermal or electrical conduction, gap filling, cushion for percussive
impacts, as a seal, as a barrier, and so on. Even design, process, and packing considerations can be met by
multifunctional adhesives.
Before you specify low-tack temporary adhesive, be sure to consider environmental factors like
exposure and temperature, which can reduce the anticipated lifespan of temporary adhesive.
The surface energy of your components dictate not only which types of adhesives are used — generally speaking,
acrylic-based adhesives for high surface energy materials and rubber-based adhesives for low surface energy
materials — but how much will be required.
Metal, Kapton, Polyester, Polyurethane, Flexible PVC, Polystyrene, Acetal, EVA, Polyethylene
ABS, Polycarbonate, Rigid PVC, Acrylic (PE), Polypropylene (PP), Tedlar (PVF), Power Coated
Paints, Teflon, EPDM Foam
Cockling can cause performance issues, or even complete failure, in your product and can lead to fabrication
issues if prefabricated PSA strips or sheets are stored prior to use. This is in addition to potential cost increases
that you can incur due to cockling-related issues.
Understanding the basics of what you require from an adhesive material can go a long way toward improving your
interactions with an adhesive manufacturer. When working with a high quality adhesives manufacturer, one with
years of proven experience and expertise, they can help guide you to the best adhesives expediently.
With both you and your adhesives manufacturer on the same page, your project will run much more smoothly
— it will get off the ground more quickly, have an overall accelerated turnaround time, and, ultimately, lower
costs for you.
Ready to request your next adhesives project, or want to learn more about the intricacies of adhesive selection?
Contact CGR Products today.
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