Understanding
Why Adhesion In Extrusion Coating Decreases With
Diminishing Coating Thickness, Part I: Penetration
of Porous Substrates
Barry A. Morris, DuPont
Presentation Date: February 7, 2006, CD ROM
$75.00 (member) $99.00 (nonmember)
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Description:
It is well known that in extrusion coating the
adhesion of PE to paperboard and other porous
substrates decreases with decreasing thickness.
Several hypotheses are proposed for the origin
of this decrease, including a reduction in time
for oxidation, faster cooling in the air gap and
more rapid quenching in the nip. A model of the
penetration of the molten polymer into the substrate
shows that the greatest effect is cooling in the
nip; thinner coatings have less time to flow into
the interstices of the substrate once contact
with the chill roll is made. The model results
agree well with experimental adhesion data from
the literature and lead to practical suggestions
for improving adhesion performance.
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