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ACCU DYNE TEST ™ Bibliography

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700. van Oss, C.J., W. Wu, and R.F. Giese, “Lifshitz-van der Waals, Lewis acid-base and electrostatic interactions in adhesion in aqueous media,” in First International Congress on Adhesion Science and Technology: Festschrift in Honor of Dr. K.L. Mittal on the Occasion of his 50th Birthday, W.J. van Ooij and H.R. Anderson Jr., eds., 49-62, VSP, Dec 1998.

Lifshitz-van der Waals (LW) and Lewis acid-base (AB), together with electrostatic (EL) forces are the non-covalent forces acting in adhesion in condensed phase media, such that the work of adhesion, VEadh= WLW+ WAB+ WEL. In the case of serum albumin (SA) and glass surfaces or silica particles, on a macroscopic scale, WEW> 0, WAB< 0 and WEL< 0, so that W'ddh is negative, ie repulsive. Nonetheless, in aqueous media, at neutral pH, SA adheres to glass surfaces, as well as to silica particles. It may be hypothesized that on a microscopic level, negatively charged, electron-donating SA moieties, located on prominent sites with a small radius of curvature, can penetrate the macroscopic repulsion field and bind to electron-accepting cations imbedded in the glass surfaces (Ca ions) or in silica particles (Si ions). The correctness of the hypothesis is supported by the fact that all adhering SA can be desorbed from, say, silica particles with Na2-EDTA. Furthermore, energy vs. distance diagrams demonstrate that the more prominently located SA sites with a small radius of curvature should indeed be able to overcome the macroscopic repulsion field and to adhere locally to microscopic cationic sites in the glass or silica. Thus, energy vs. distance balances of the extended DLVO type (including AB as well as LW and EL forces), combining macroscopic and microscopic interactions, can be used to predict adhesion in complex systems.

1659. van Oss, C.J., and R.J. Good, “Surface tension and the solubility of polymers and biopolymers: the role of polar and apolar interfacial free energies,” J. Macromolecular Science, A26, 1183-1203, (1989).

Surface tension data can be used for estimating the solubility of polymers in liquids. By determining the apolar and the polar components of the surface tension of polymers and of solvents, the attractive free energy, δG121, of a polymer (1) in a given solvent (2) can be established. By also taking into account the contactable surface area of two polymer molecules, immersed in a liquid, δG121 can be expressed in units of kT. Solubility then is favored when -1.5 kT < δG121 < 0 for apolar systems, and when -1.5 kT < δG121 for polar systems. In polar solvents, hydrogen bonding can often increase δG121 from <-1.5 kT to > + 1.5 kT. Positive values are frequently attained and this strongly shifts the behavior from insolubility to solubility. A number of proteins exemplify this behavior.

2097. van der Leeden, M.C., and G. Frens, “Surface properties of plastic materials in relation to their adhering performance,” Advanced Engineering Materials, 4, 280-289, (2002).

Adhesion between polymeric phases like adhesives and plastic surfaces is critical in many technological and industrial applications. In the last decades much progress has been made to understand the impact of the surface properties of both phases on the adhesive strength between them. These surface properties influence processes like wetting, molecular adsorption and inter-diffusion which determine how an interface develops into an interphase after the two materials have been brought into contact. Ultimately, the properties of this interphase determine the overall adhesion strength of an assembly. In this paper important parameters in the adhesion process will be reviewed, including methods to engineer these parameters in order to attain adhesion strengths ranging from complete release to irreversible bonding.

1584. von Arnim, V., T. Stegmaier, D. Praschak, T. Bahners, A. Lunk, et al, “Continuous plasma treatment of textiles under atmospheric pressure,” in Proceedings of the 29th Aachen Textile Conference, DWI an der RWTH Aachen University, 2002.

 

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