High-performance
adhesives dominate automotive engineering.

Organofunctional
silanes in adhesives and sealants allow rapid and reliable bonding, as well as
long-term stability for applications such as windshield bonding.
A robot sprays adhesive on
the interior of a truck’s windshield. Minutes later, this major glass
component, weighing 40-60 kg, is firmly bonded to the coated body of the
vehicle. A few hours later, the freight-forwarding contractor can take possession
of this new vehicle.
Adhesive-bonded joints are being increasingly used in the automotive industry
in both trucks and passenger cars, in the body as add-on parts. Rapid advances
in robotics, as well as modern, high-performance adhesives, play an important
role in this technology, known as structural bonding. This bonding technology
is rapidly gaining ground for automotive components under the hood, in the roof
and on the doors. The lengths to be bonded in top- and mid-range passenger cars
are now sometimes three times longer than they were just a few years ago,
resulting in improved vehicle stability and crash safety. Weight savings are a
possibility as well.
“Today, it’s no longer a problem to bond steel, metal, glass or coating
surfaces to other functional materials,” said Degussa Manager Dr. Gerrit
Schneider, who is responsible for marketing organofunctional silanes in
adhesives and sealants. These silanes - admixed into the basic adhesive
supplied by a producer - allow rapid and reliable bonding, as well as the
desired long-term stability.
“In the absence of silanes, development of high-performance adhesives would
hardly have been possible,” he said. “Only silanes allow technically
labor-intensive processes such as screwing, welding and riveting to be
dispensed with.” These ‘adhesives in adhesives’ require careful handling;
incorrect storage or transportation of silanes can adversely affect the subsequent
properties of the adhesive and, in some cases, may lead to serious problems in
the bonded product.
Dynasylan
® specialty silanes protect adhesives and
sealants from excessively high atmospheric humidity. During transport of the
bonded (but not cured) joints, they ensure full bonding performance.
Organofunctional silanes are therefore suitable for use wherever very high
adhesive strength is needed within a short time. In truck windshields, this is
possible in 15-30 minutes.
Degussa has been active in the research, production and application of
organofunctional silanes for more than 70 years. The company holds more than
700 patents in the field. In the adhesives and sealants industry, Dynasylan
products are used as adhesion promoters (adhesion), and in crosslinking
(cohesion), drying, reinforcement, and “endcapping” (additional selective
reaction steps). The silanes are also dehydrating agents, comonomers, binders
and reaction partners. In addition, the products are used in coatings,
plastics, and cables; on glass fibers and glass fabrics; and even in the
synthesis of pharmaceuticals. The most important considerations in their
manufacture and use are compatibility, conservation of resources, and
sustainable development. Dynasylan products comply with the chemical industry’s
Responsible Care initiative.
About the Company
Degussa, a wholly owned
subsidiary of the RAG Group, is the global market leader in specialty
chemicals. Its business is creating essentials - innovative products and system
solutions that make indispensable contributions to its customers’ success.
For more information, visit www.specialchem4adhesives.com/tc/silanes or
www.dynasylan.com.