PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Versatile bonding for lightweight components

Versatile bonding for lightweight components
2014-11-20
(Press-News.org) Shedding pounds is all the rage these days and the global trend toward weight reduction has even spread to the automobile industry. Cars are to get even lighter - using new materials such as ultra-high-strength steels or carbon, and carbon-fiber-reinforced plastics (CFRP). But no matter which diet regime and which lightweight components manufacturers choose, they all want the same thing: the best and longest-lasting joining method for vehicle components. Since Duroplast, which often serves as the matrix component for CFRPs, can't be welded, another joining technique is called for.

Bonding is the best solution. "We work primarily with structural adhesives, which bond components permanently and create additional shape stability," says Dr.-Ing. Jan Spengler, a chemical analyst in the Plastics division at the Fraunhofer Institute for Structural Durability and Reliability LBF in Darmstadt. These adhesive bonds offer a particular advantage; they hold up considerably better in crashes than other types of bonds. What's more, adhesives possess better damping characteristics than metal and improve noise vibration harshness (NVH). NVH is the term for what car occupants perceive as vibration or hear as noise. "The adhesive layer functions like a classic damper, which saves on insulation material and reduces weight," says Dr.-Ing. Halvar Schmidt from the LBF's Structural Durability division.

Rigid and elastic at the same time

Both the Plastics and Structural Durability divisions at the LBF have been researching dual cure adhesives for the past year and a half. What makes them special is that they harden in two phases. For gradient adhesives like these, humidity, heat, anaerobic conditions or UV light trigger the first stage of the hardening process. Another activator can be used to initiate a secondary hardening process. "This kind of adhesive has been available on the market for some time, but up to now the products have always provided a constant elasticity and the same rigidity at every point," reports Spengler. "We've succeeded in manufacturing an innovative dual-cure adhesive with variable elasticity." The first heat-triggered hardening mechanism coats the entire adhesive surface, resulting in a soft, flexible product. A second hardening process begins when it is exposed to UV light. What makes it special is that this reaction can be contained to very specific areas. The adhesive's polymer chains crosslink where it is exposed to UV light, creating a localized area with greater rigidity. In this way, the LBF researchers have produced a bonded plastic with one very soft and one very hard half.

Thanks to the gradient rigidity, the innovative adhesive can achieve a significantly prolonged bond. This is important, considering that every trip a vehicle makes subjects the car to vibration loads, and such external stress is always distributed unevenly across the bond. What then happens is that joints develop stress peaks at the edges, and the bond is highly stressed. "Our newly developed adhesive with gradient rigidity is elastic on the outer edges and handles stresses better and stress peaks are absorbed," explains Spengler. "But in the middle, the adhesive layer has been spot-cured and is correspondingly rigid, which ensures that the bond and the adhered vehicle chassis maintain continuous shape stability.

INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Versatile bonding for lightweight components

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Climate change will slow China's progress in reducing infectioius diseases

2014-11-20
China has made significant progress increasing access to tap water and sanitation services, and has sharply reduced the burden of waterborne and water-related infectious diseases over the past two decades. However, in a study published in the latest edition of Nature Climate Change, researchers from Emory University found that climate change will blunt China's efforts at further reducing these diseases in the decades to come. The study found that by 2030, changes to the global climate could delay China's progress reducing diarrheal and vector-borne diseases by up to seven ...

Professional majors strengthen the mission of liberal arts colleges

2014-11-20
Faced with declining enrollment and rising costs, some small liberal arts colleges have added professional and vocational majors, a decision University of Iowa researchers say has strengthened rather than undermined the mission of the schools. In fact, students at liberal arts colleges realized virtually the same educational gains, no matter their major, according to the UI report released earlier this month. The only differences were liberal arts major expressed a greater interest in literacy while professional majors scored higher in leadership skills. "Essentially, ...

MSK team makes key discovery in understanding immunotherapy's successes -- and its failures

2014-11-20
A collaborative team of leaders in the field of cancer immunology from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center has made a key discovery that advances the understanding of why some patients respond to ipilimumab, an immunotherapy drug, while others do not. MSK was at the forefront of the clinical research that brought this CTLA-4 blocking antibody to melanoma patients. A report published online first today in the New England Journal of Medicine shows that in patients who respond to ipilimumab, their cancer cells carry a high number of gene mutations--some of which make ...

Three drugs may be better than one for certain patients with advanced colorectal cancer

2014-11-20
Barcelona, Spain: Patients with a form of advanced colorectal cancer that is driven by a mutated version of the BRAF gene have limited treatment options available. However, results from a multi-centre clinical trial suggest that the cancer may respond to a combination of three targeted drugs. Professor Josep Tabernero, head of the medical oncology department at Vall d'Hebron University Hospital and director of the Vall d'Hebron Institute of Oncology, Barcelona, Spain, will tell the 26th EORTC-NCI-AACR [1] Symposium on Molecular Targets and Cancer Therapeutics in Barcelona ...

New approach for treating ALS

2014-11-20
(PHILADELPHIA) - Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's disease, is a neurodegenerative disease that primarily kills motor neurons, leading to paralysis and death 2 to 5 years from diagnosis. Currently ALS has no cure. Despite promising early-stage research, the majority of drugs in development for ALS have failed. Now researchers have uncovered a possible explanation. In a study published November 20th in the Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology, researchers show that the brain's machinery for pumping out toxins is ratcheted up in ALS ...

Serotonin's early role in the assembly of brain circuits

2014-11-20
A lot of research has shown that poor regulation of the serotonin system, caused by certain genetic variations, can increase the risk of developing psychiatric illnesses such as autism, depression, or anxiety disorders. Furthermore, genetic variations in the components of the serotonin system can interact with stress experienced during the foetal stages and/or early childhood, which can also increase the risk of developing psychiatric problems later on. In order to better understand serotonin's influence in the developing brain, Alexandre Dayer's team in the Psychiatry ...

Out of India

Out of India
2014-11-20
Working at the edge of a coal mine in India, a team of Johns Hopkins researchers and colleagues have filled in a major gap in science's understanding of the evolution of a group of animals that includes horses and rhinos. That group likely originated on the subcontinent when it was still an island headed swiftly for collision with Asia, the researchers report Nov. 20 in the online journal Nature Communications. Modern horses, rhinos and tapirs belong to a biological group, or order, called Perissodactyla. Also known as "odd-toed ungulates," animals in the order have, ...

Permafrost soil: Possible source of abrupt rise in greenhouse gases at end of last Ice Age

2014-11-20
Bremerhaven/Germany, 20 November 2014. Scientists from the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) have identified a possible source of carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gases that were abruptly released to the atmosphere in large quantities around 14,600 years ago. According to this new interpretation, the CO2 - released during the onset of the Bølling/Allerød warm period - presumably had their origin in thawing Arctic permafrost soil and amplified the initial warming through positive feedback. The study now appears ...

Extreme weather in the Arctic problematic for people, wildlife

Extreme weather in the Arctic problematic for people, wildlife
2014-11-20
The residents of Longyearbyen, the largest town on the Norwegian arctic island archipelago of Svalbard, remember it as the week that the weather gods caused trouble. Temperatures were ridiculously warm - and reached a maximum of nearly +8 degrees C in one location at a time when mean temperatures are normally -15 degrees C. It rained in record amounts. Snow packs became so saturated that slushy snow avalanches from the mountains surrounding Longyearbyen covered roads and took out a major pedestrian bridge. Snowy streets and the tundra were transformed into icy, ...

New computer model predicts gut metabolites to better understand gastrointestinal disease

2014-11-20
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, Mass-- Tufts University School of Engineering researchers and collaborators from Texas A&M University have published the first research to use computational modeling to predict and identify the metabolic products of gastrointestinal (GI) tract microorganisms. Understanding these metabolic products, or metabolites, could influence how clinicians diagnose and treat GI diseases, as well as many other metabolic and neurological diseases increasingly associated with compromised GI function. The research appears in the November 20 edition of Nature Communications ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Brain mapping unlocks key Alzheimer’s insights

Clinical trial tests novel stem-cell treatment for Parkinson’s disease

Awareness of rocky mountain spotted fever saves lives

Breakthrough in noninvasive monitoring of molecular processes in deep tissue

BU researcher named rising star in endocrinology

Stressed New Yorkers can now seek care at Mount Sinai’s new resilience-focused medical practice

BU researchers uncover links between metabolism and aggressive breast cancer

Engineers took apart batteries from Tesla and China’s leading EV manufacturer to see what’s inside

Paralyzed man moves robotic arm with his thoughts

Planetary science: More potential locations for ice on Moon

Injectable Therapy is 'magic' for those who can’t take HIV pills

siRNA-AGO2 complex inhibits bacterial gene translation: a novel therapeutic strategy for superbug infection

Memory is impaired in aged rats after 3 days of high-fat eating

Artificial muscles for tremor suppression

A new way to engineer composite materials

AERA selects 29 exemplary scholars as 2025 Fellows

Touchless tech: Control fabrics with a wave of your finger

JMIR aging invites submissions on the social and cultural drivers of health in aging adults

New research sheds light on why scleroderma affects mostly women and how to treat it

Lack of appropriate mental health care impacts quality of life for people with COPD

Yawn! Many people are bored by spiritual practice

A new algorithm sheds light on ‘disordered’ proteins

How’s the weather on Mars?

Plants struggled for millions of years after the world’s worst climate catastrophe

Clinical trial opens to study groundbreaking 3D printed device for babies with rare respiratory disease

Effects of shenfu decoction on neutrophil chemotactic function in septic mice

ESMT Berlin offers scholarships in executive leadership

New WSU study shows how scarcity pricing helps 'cult wineries' drive demand

New discovery and grant to accelerate Strep A vaccine efforts

Novel enzyme found in gut bacteria could revolutionize prebiotic research

[Press-News.org] Versatile bonding for lightweight components