An Engineering Analysis of Polymer Film Adhesion to Rigid Substrates

<p>An important source of interface fracture contributing to adhesive failure in a bimaterial sandwich, consisting of a rigid substrate and a viscoelastic encapsulant material, arises from residual stresses. The encapsulant is often deposited on the substrate above its glass transition tempera...

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Main Author: Heymans, Luc J.
Format: Others
Published: 1983
Online Access:https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/1821/1/Heymans_lj_1983.pdf
Heymans, Luc J. (1983) An Engineering Analysis of Polymer Film Adhesion to Rigid Substrates. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/3GQW-YP87. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-05152007-111322 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-05152007-111322>
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spelling ndltd-CALTECH-oai-thesis.library.caltech.edu-18212019-12-22T03:06:51Z An Engineering Analysis of Polymer Film Adhesion to Rigid Substrates Heymans, Luc J. <p>An important source of interface fracture contributing to adhesive failure in a bimaterial sandwich, consisting of a rigid substrate and a viscoelastic encapsulant material, arises from residual stresses. The encapsulant is often deposited on the substrate above its glass transition temperature region but used below this temperature range. In order to determine the magnitude of the residual stresses a viscoelastic stress analysis of a bimaterial sandwich is carried out, taking into account the time-dependent material properties of the polymeric layer and the environmental "loading" conditions. The theoretical analysis is paralleled by an experimental examination of the time-dependent out-of-plane deformation of thin, circular sandwiches.</p> <p>Polyvinyl acetate was chosen as a model material exhibiting significant viscoelastic effects under room test conditions. Therefore the pertinent physical and mechanical properties of PYA<sub>c</sub> are determined; these include the thermal coefficient of expansion, the shear creep compliance and the relaxation modulus. In the experimental work BK-7 glass is taken as the "rigid" substrate. The measurements connected to the stress analysis are monitored with laser interferometry (Newton's rings). A comparison between theory and experiment completes the viscoelastic stress analysis.</p> <p>In the second part of this study time dependent adhesive failure of rubbery materials is investigated. Polymeric materials are being used increasingly for a wide variety of applications. Some of these materials are applied as protective layers to isolate their substrates from a hostile environment. Others achieve remarkable structural bond strengths thereby displacing the traditional mechanical fasteners like bolts and rivets. If one wants to investigate the long time integrity of a layer assembly the time dependence of the material properties of the adhesives needs to be carefully analyzed. This time dependence is also reflected in the energy required to create new surfaces as interfacial debonding proceeds the adhesive fracture energy is one of the dominant parameters in time dependent adhesive failure. In our investigation it is characterized through peel testing.</p> <p>With the knowledge of the pertinent material properties as well as of the adhesive fracture energy, we then proceed to formulate a criterion for continuing interfacial crack propagation. The analysis is carried out for elastic solids, with the effect of viscoelastic behavior incorporated later on. Debond tests provide a way to check how well the theoretical predictions correspond to experimental debond results.</p> 1983 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/1821/1/Heymans_lj_1983.pdf https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-05152007-111322 Heymans, Luc J. (1983) An Engineering Analysis of Polymer Film Adhesion to Rigid Substrates. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/3GQW-YP87. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-05152007-111322 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-05152007-111322> https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/1821/
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format Others
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description <p>An important source of interface fracture contributing to adhesive failure in a bimaterial sandwich, consisting of a rigid substrate and a viscoelastic encapsulant material, arises from residual stresses. The encapsulant is often deposited on the substrate above its glass transition temperature region but used below this temperature range. In order to determine the magnitude of the residual stresses a viscoelastic stress analysis of a bimaterial sandwich is carried out, taking into account the time-dependent material properties of the polymeric layer and the environmental "loading" conditions. The theoretical analysis is paralleled by an experimental examination of the time-dependent out-of-plane deformation of thin, circular sandwiches.</p> <p>Polyvinyl acetate was chosen as a model material exhibiting significant viscoelastic effects under room test conditions. Therefore the pertinent physical and mechanical properties of PYA<sub>c</sub> are determined; these include the thermal coefficient of expansion, the shear creep compliance and the relaxation modulus. In the experimental work BK-7 glass is taken as the "rigid" substrate. The measurements connected to the stress analysis are monitored with laser interferometry (Newton's rings). A comparison between theory and experiment completes the viscoelastic stress analysis.</p> <p>In the second part of this study time dependent adhesive failure of rubbery materials is investigated. Polymeric materials are being used increasingly for a wide variety of applications. Some of these materials are applied as protective layers to isolate their substrates from a hostile environment. Others achieve remarkable structural bond strengths thereby displacing the traditional mechanical fasteners like bolts and rivets. If one wants to investigate the long time integrity of a layer assembly the time dependence of the material properties of the adhesives needs to be carefully analyzed. This time dependence is also reflected in the energy required to create new surfaces as interfacial debonding proceeds the adhesive fracture energy is one of the dominant parameters in time dependent adhesive failure. In our investigation it is characterized through peel testing.</p> <p>With the knowledge of the pertinent material properties as well as of the adhesive fracture energy, we then proceed to formulate a criterion for continuing interfacial crack propagation. The analysis is carried out for elastic solids, with the effect of viscoelastic behavior incorporated later on. Debond tests provide a way to check how well the theoretical predictions correspond to experimental debond results.</p>
author Heymans, Luc J.
spellingShingle Heymans, Luc J.
An Engineering Analysis of Polymer Film Adhesion to Rigid Substrates
author_facet Heymans, Luc J.
author_sort Heymans, Luc J.
title An Engineering Analysis of Polymer Film Adhesion to Rigid Substrates
title_short An Engineering Analysis of Polymer Film Adhesion to Rigid Substrates
title_full An Engineering Analysis of Polymer Film Adhesion to Rigid Substrates
title_fullStr An Engineering Analysis of Polymer Film Adhesion to Rigid Substrates
title_full_unstemmed An Engineering Analysis of Polymer Film Adhesion to Rigid Substrates
title_sort engineering analysis of polymer film adhesion to rigid substrates
publishDate 1983
url https://thesis.library.caltech.edu/1821/1/Heymans_lj_1983.pdf
Heymans, Luc J. (1983) An Engineering Analysis of Polymer Film Adhesion to Rigid Substrates. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/3GQW-YP87. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-05152007-111322 <https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-05152007-111322>
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