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Tape adhesive types: Silicone vs. Acrylic vs. Rubber

March 27th, 2008 by LINQblog · 5 Comments

As described in the article “How Polyimide Tapes are Made“, tapes are composed of two distinct layers, each of which is critical to the properties of the final product. The first layer is the backing material, and whether this is polyimide film (the generic verison of DuPont’s Kapton), polyvinyl chloride (PVC), Polyethylene terephthalate (PET), or some other plastic, cloth or paper material, this layer is selected to provide half of the tape’s final properties. The other half is determined by the adhesive layer applied to this backing layer.

The Usual Suspects

Generally speaking, manufacturers use three different adhesive types in combination with the backing material to produce a final “tape” product. Though these adhesive types can be subdivided into subgroups, the main categories are as follows:

  1. Silicone
  2. Acrylic
  3. Rubber

Each of these adhesive types have advantages and disadvantages which make them more or less suitable for particular applications. Here we will draw the major lines outlining these differences.

Silicone adhesives

Silicones have been used to formulate adhesive products for decades due to their flexibility, temperature cycling resistance, chemical resistance, and wide range of possible material properties.

Silicone adhesives have the following general characteristics:

  • High flexibility (low modulus) at sub-ambient temperature
  • Consistent performance over wide temperature range (a reason they work so well with Polyimide Tapes)
  • Excellent ageing and UV resistance (a reason they work so well in LED applications)
  • High temperature resistance
  • Good resistance to polar solvents

Compared to acrylic and rubber adhesives, they are significantly more expensive, but due to their excellent high temperature performance they are very well suited to splicing tapes, masking tapes and polyimide (Kapton) tapes.

Acrylic Adhesives

Acrylic adhesives can either be water-based (this is also referred to as emulsion or dispersion) or solvent-based. Water-based are slower drying compared to solvent-based systems but generally solvent-based acrylic systems have better resistance to other solvents, chemicals and water. Comparatively, water-based systems are less expensive than their solvent-based counter parts.

Acrylic adhesives are generally divided into two subgroups: Pure and Modified

Pure acrylic
Pure acrylic adhesives share the following characteristics:

  • Reasonable adhesion to a wide range of substrates (see modified acrylics below)
  • Good ageing, transmittance and UV resistance (a reason they are often used in fiberoptic applications
  • Reasonable temperature resistance; between silicones (high resistance) and rubber (low resistance)

Pure acrylics have a lower tack (“stickyness when dry” for the layman) and less adhesion on hard-to-bond plastics such as high- and low-density polyethylene (HDPE & LDPE) and polypropylene (PP) than modified acrylic or rubber adhesives. Pure acrylic adhesives are mainly used on tapes whose applications are bonding, sealing or surface protection.

Modified acrylic
For all intents and purposes, modified acrylics have the same characteristics as pure acrylics, but have superior adhesion to the hard-to-bond-plastics mentioned above. Generally, these are more expensive than pure acrylics and are used for plastic bonding (including vinyl and linoleum), lamination and splicing.

Rubber Adhesives

Just from looking at the roll, it is very hard to tell what type of rubber is used on the tape. Look at the figure to the right,Industrial Rubber Tape and this same picture can be used to describe every type of rubber-tape below. The key is to ask the supplier what type of rubber adhesive is used. Like acrylics, rubber adhesives can be divided into two subgroups: Natural and Synthetic

Natural rubber
These adhesive have higher tack (again “stickyness when dry” for the layman) than acrylic adhesives as well as higher shear strength but they have limited UV resistance. These are used in the cheapest tapes on the market, but have limited applications. Natural rubber adhesives are used in duct tapes, low-temperature masking tapes and surface protection tapes (think of the tape you get on your new fridge or stove).

Synthetic rubber
As the name implies, synthetic rubber is “formulated rubber” – think coming from the lab, not coming from the tree. Synthetic rubber can broken into three subgroups: Hot-melt, Solvent and Butyl rubber.

Hot-melt rubber

Hot-melt is a low-temperature melting plastic, which makes this adhesive have low temperature resistance. It also ages poorly (becoming brittle) and has low UV resistance. This rubber is used for low- to medium-duty carton sealing, low-temperature splicing as well as paper core starting applications.

Solvent rubber

Solvent-rubber based adhesives have better temperature and aging performance but still poor UV resistance. It is used for electrical and foam tapes.

Butyl rubber

Butyl rubber based tapes have excellent UV and aging resistance but lower mechanical strength. These tapes are used in foam tape applications and construction and plumbing applications such as pipe joints.

Visit CAPLINQ.com today or ask us how we can help you select the right tape for your application.
tapes are mainly used for sealing applications in the building and construction industry. T

Related Posts

  1. Polyimide Tape – Silicone vs. Acrylic Adhesive
  2. How is Polyimide Pressure Sensitive Tape Made?
  3. PIT0.5S: 0.5mil Polyimide Film with Silicone Adhesive

Tags: Industrial Tapes · Polyimide · Semiconductor

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5 responses so far ↓

  • 1 peter // Jun 23, 2008 at 7:31 am

    thanks very much for your sharing. i learn much

  • 2 Jaime Ayala // Jul 1, 2010 at 6:33 pm

    How I can identificate a rubber vs a acrylic adhesive, if I don’t have sofisticated equipment?
    Thanks

  • 3 LINQblog // Aug 20, 2010 at 10:12 am

    Often smelling the tape can tell you also. Rubber tends to have a very sweet smell.

  • 4 vineeth // Feb 6, 2011 at 11:17 pm

    Can you help me in choosing the best type of adhesive to use in a tape that has to be pasted on a powder coated Alumnium enclosure. Operating temperature 130Deg c and max voltage 4kV.
    Thanks.

  • 5 LINQblog // Feb 7, 2011 at 8:38 am

    For powder coating applications, as with other temporary bonding applications, there are three key factors to look for:

    1 – Price is important since it is an intermediate step and does not have any value once the process is important. For these reasons, look for a a polyester instead of a polyimide. Polyester is good for intermittent (5 mins or so) at 180°C and are much less expensive than a polyimide film.

    2 – No adhesive residue after removal. You didn’t apply the masking tape only to have it leave an adhesive layer after removal. For this reason, look for a low-adhesion bonding material.

    3 – Backing thickness. For handling these materials, 1mil thickness may (but is not always) be too thin. You want to choose a thickness that meets your needs without going any thicker. Extra thickness means extra cost that you will just throw away once the process is complete.

    CAPLINQ recommends three potential materials, listed in order of recommendation (links are to the products technical datasheets):
    a) PET1.5A-ULA-RL: 1.5-mil polyester film backing with an ultra-low-adhesion pressure sensitive acrylic adhesive on a paper release liner. It is designed to be a temporary bonding or masking tape for use in a wide range of applications.

    b) PET2SG: Difference with the one above is that it is not on a release liner, is 2mil thick (instead of 1.5mil) and uses a silicone adhesive. Designed for applications that need slightly higher adhesion and temperature resistance and do not want a release liner.

    c) PET1S: Difference with first one is that it is only 1mil thick and uses silicone and no release liner.

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