Enhancement of Steel Sandwich Sheet Adhesion Using
Mechanical Interlocking Structures Formed by Electrochemical Etching
Posted on 2021-05-21 - 16:00
Steel
sandwich sheets (steel–polymer–steel), which
are composed of lightweight polymers bonded on both sides with rigid
steel sheets, have recently been developed as functional lightweight
materials. In this study, a steel sandwich sheet (electrogalvanized
(EG) steel sheet–polypropylene (PP)–EG steel sheet)
with improved normal adhesion is fabricated without adhesives. Instead,
adhesion is achieved via mechanical interlocking between the etched
EG steel sheets and PP. Hierarchical structures were formed on the
EG steel sheet surface by electrochemical etching to attain effective
mechanical interlocking for improving normal adhesion without any
adhesives. In the case of the EG steel sheet etched at 6 V for 7 s,
a high fraction (∼35%) of holes (size: <1 μm2) with nanoscale scalloped structures was formed on the EG steel
sheet surface. The normal adhesion test result of the fabricated steel
sandwich sheet showed that the adhesion strength increased from virtually
0 (bare) to 559.6 kPa as a result of mechanical interlocking. The
results of the focused ion beam–scanning electron microscopy
and energy-dispersive spectrometry analyses confirmed the cohesive
failure of PP resulting from the successful mechanical interlocking
of PP with the holes formed on the etched EG steel sheet. To examine
the effect of hierarchical structures on the normal adhesion of the
steel sandwich sheet, finite element analysis was implemented.
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Kim, Seonghyeon; Kim, Aeree; Yoo, Dongwoo; Yoo, Hye-Jin; Lee, Suk-Kyu; Kim, Joonwon (2021). Enhancement of Steel Sandwich Sheet Adhesion Using
Mechanical Interlocking Structures Formed by Electrochemical Etching. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.1c00601