| Literature DB >> 27650290 |
Kyle Gobble1, Amelia Stark1, Stephen P Stagon2.
Abstract
The performance of many consumer products suffers due to weak and inconsistent bonds formed to low surface energy polymer materials, such as polyolefin-based high-density polyethylene (HDPE), with adhesives, such as cyanoacrylate. In this letter, we present an industrially relevant means of increasing bond shear strength and consistency through vacuum metallization of chromium thin films and nanorods, using HDPE as a prototype material and cyanoacrylate as a prototype adhesive. For the as received HDPE surfaces, unmodified bond shear strength is shown to be only 0.20 MPa with a standard deviation of 14 %. When Cr metallization layers are added onto the HDPE at thicknesses of 50 nm or less, nanorod-structured coatings outperform continuous films and have a maximum bond shear strength of 0.96 MPa with a standard deviation of 7 %. When the metallization layer is greater than 50 nm thick, continuous films demonstrate greater performance than nanorod coatings and have a maximum shear strength of 1.03 MPa with a standard deviation of 6 %. Further, when the combination of surface roughening with P400 grit sandpaper and metallization is used, 100-nm-thick nanorod coatings show a tenfold increase in shear strength over the baseline, reaching a maximum of 2.03 MPa with a standard deviation of only 3 %. The substantial increase in shear strength through metallization, and the combination of roughening with metallization, may have wide-reaching implications in consumer products which utilize low surface energy plastics.Entities:
Keywords: Adhesion; Cyanoacrylate; Nanorods; Physical vapor deposition; Polyolefin
Year: 2016 PMID: 27650290 PMCID: PMC5030205 DOI: 10.1186/s11671-016-1629-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Fig. 1SEM images of bonding surfaces. SEM images of the substrates used for lap shear bonds with a the surface of an unmodified HDPE substrate, with a high-magnification inset where the scale bar is 5 μm, and b a prepared surface of 304 stainless steel, with a high-magnification inset where the scale bar is 5 μm. The HDPE surface has been prepared with 5 nm of gold deposited for SEM imaging
Fig. 2SEM images of nanorod- and film-coated surfaces. SEM images of Cr films deposited onto HDPE substrates to thicknesses of a 50 nm and b 200 nm and Cr nanorods deposited onto HDPE substrates to nominal thicknesses of c 50 nm and d 200 nm. d The inset is an SEM image at a higher magnification to highlight the morphology of the coalesced Cr nanorods, where the scale bar is 1 μm
Fig. 3Graph of shear strength under different coating conditions. Shear strength of the joints created at the different conditions, including a baseline of no modification. Standard deviation of the strength is reported as the scale bars