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Thursday, 5 January 2017
Autohesion of polymers
Published Date
Polymer 5 August 2016, Vol.97:387–407,doi:10.1016/j.polymer.2016.05.043 Author
Firas Awaja a,b,,
aCenter for Materials and Microsystems, PAM-SE, Fondazione Bruno Kessler, Via Sommarive 18, Trento, Italy
bDepartment of Orthopaedic Surgery, Medical University Innsbruck, Innrain 36, Innsbruck, Austria
Received 29 September 2015. Revised 19 April 2016. Accepted 15 May 2016. Available online 18 May 2016.
Highlights
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This article discusses the latest debate on the main mechanisms proposed to explain autohesion of polymers such as diffusion, crystalline growth, thermodynamic and chemical bonding.
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Surface activation techniques that are used to facilitate autohesion such as plasma treatment, chemicals, UV and ozone treatments are explored.
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In addition, topics such as molecular characteristics of polymers that influence autohesion, limits to bonding strength and hermetic bonding are critically discussed.
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Methods for evaluating autohesion strength of polymers are also described.
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Comparisons between prediction models from different research groups with experimental values for authohesive bonding strength are shown.
Abstract Autohesion (direct-bonding or self-bonding) is the formation of bonds between two surfaces of an identical polymer at elevated temperature (usually just aboveTg). It is an emerging technique that has the potential to cleanly and precisely join/bond polymers without the need for adhesives. Autohesion is particularly useful for applications that require hermetic and precise polymer bonding, such as in microfluidics, MEMS, and in the encapsulation of active medical implants. This article discusses the latest debate on the main mechanisms proposed to explain autohesion of polymers such as diffusion, crystalline growth, thermodynamic and chemical bonding. Surface activation techniques that are used to facilitate autohesion such as plasma treatment, chemicals, UV and ozone treatments are explored. In addition, topics such as molecular characteristics of polymers that influence autohesion, limits to bonding strength and hermetic bonding are critically discussed. Methods for evaluating autohesion strength of polymers are also described. Comparisons between prediction models from different research groups with experimental values for authohesive bonding strength are shown. Finally, conclusions and suggestions for further research are presented. Graphical abstract
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