SolarWeenie
Mechanical
- Jun 19, 2003
- 7
Hello,
We are considering the use of ASA in an outdoor application. The material will not be loaded mechanically, with the exception of thermal expansion/contraction. It will be bonded to extruded polystyrene foam with a reactive hot melt polyurethane adhesive, so differential expansion stress is unlikely to be a problem.
The sole purpose of this material is to protect the underlying substrate from UV.
Exposure will be on a rooftop, direct and indirect UV,
-40*C -- +70*C, for 20+ years. Unacceptable failure modes are cracking, peeling, or thickness loss such that the underlying substrate is exposed to substantial UV.
Does this sound like a reasonable idea? Does anyone know of actual outdoor exposure data for this stuff for 10+ years in Arizona or Florida (or equivalant internationally)? What about actual outdoor applications? Some I have leads on is car and RV exteriors, antenna housings, and boat hulls. However I would like to find more specific examples that I can find and look at locally (San Francisco area).
Thanks!
We are considering the use of ASA in an outdoor application. The material will not be loaded mechanically, with the exception of thermal expansion/contraction. It will be bonded to extruded polystyrene foam with a reactive hot melt polyurethane adhesive, so differential expansion stress is unlikely to be a problem.
The sole purpose of this material is to protect the underlying substrate from UV.
Exposure will be on a rooftop, direct and indirect UV,
-40*C -- +70*C, for 20+ years. Unacceptable failure modes are cracking, peeling, or thickness loss such that the underlying substrate is exposed to substantial UV.
Does this sound like a reasonable idea? Does anyone know of actual outdoor exposure data for this stuff for 10+ years in Arizona or Florida (or equivalant internationally)? What about actual outdoor applications? Some I have leads on is car and RV exteriors, antenna housings, and boat hulls. However I would like to find more specific examples that I can find and look at locally (San Francisco area).
Thanks!