Publication | Closed Access
Polymer Pressure‐Sensitive Adhesive with A Temperature‐Insensitive Loss Factor Operating Under Water and Oil
74
Citations
40
References
2021
Year
Materials ScienceUnderwater PsaEngineeringPolymer TechnologyMechanical PropertiesEfficient Adhesion UnderwaterPolymer StabilityAdhesive MaterialMechanical EngineeringPolymer SciencePsas TrendPolymer ProcessingWettingPolymer Pressure‐sensitive AdhesivePolymer ChemistryPolymers
Abstract Loss factor tan δ determines the viscoelasticity of a material. Higher or lower loss factor tanδ (>1 or <1) suggests a viscous or elastic material. Most polymer pressure‐sensitive adhesives (PSAs) possess a limited operational temperature range (near room temperature), above which the PSAs trend to be more viscous (un‐crosslinked) or more elastic (crosslinked), and below which PSAs become more elastic. These properties are unfavorable for PSA operation. Herein, an underwater PSA possessing short hydrophobic side chains and weak hydrogen bond interactions are described. Proper modulus and stable loss factor close to 1 contributes to an efficient adhesion underwater over a temperature range of 0–100 °C. Moreover, by introducing Teflon particles, the adhesion can be operated under silicon oil from room temperature to 150 °C due to the formation of a drainage surface structure and its temperature insensitivity.
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