January 13, 2023
Conference Paper
The Roles of Interface, Adherend, and Adhesive in Plasma- and Other-treated Joints of Metals and FRP Materials Under Shear Deformation
Abstract
This work investigated the role of interface, adherend, and adhesive in adhesively-bonded metal-metal, metal-CFRTP, and CFRTP-CFRTP combinations with plasma-treated surfaces under shear deformation. To this end, aluminum alloys (AA5052 and AA6061) and short-carbon-fiber-reinforced polyamide 66 (CFRPA66) were used as examples and performed through single lap shear testing. The results showed that air plasma surface treatment can improve the shear behavior of adhesively-bonded AA5052-CFRPA66 and CFRPA66-CFRPA66 joints with about 20% enhanced lap shear strength compared to non-treated cases. Failure surface morphology of plasma-treated CFRPA66 adherend confirmed this improvement by showing an increased amount of adhesive failure than interfacial failure between CFRPA66 and adhesive. But this is not true for AA5052-AA6061 joints with plasma-treated surfaces exhibiting almost no enhanced lap shear strength. This study also showed the importance of selecting a proper surface modification method for the enhancement of adhesive-bonded structures under shear deformation through the analysis of the results in this study and in the literature. For fiber-reinforced polymers (FRPs), improving FRP/adhesive interface may be prioritized via different surface modification methods (e.g., plasma, chemical coating, etc.) than adhesive modification methods. However, for surface-cleaned metals, toughening adhesive via different enhancement methods (e.g., nano-particles, chemical enhancement, etc.) may be more important than improving metal/adhesive interface. These insightful results are valuable in the area of multi-materials joining.Published: January 13, 2023