PearlRock
Aerospace
- Apr 22, 2010
- 25
Hi everybody,
I am new at this, and I'm not sure where to find documentation on it, so I figured I'd ask the community.
I have 2 materials (epoxy and steel) undergoing thermal cycling. I'm getting cracking between the two. Is there a rule of thumb to determine conditions when cracking won't likely occur? I am considering putting a 3rd piece of material between the steel and the epoxy with a thermal expansion coefficient bigger than steal, but smaller than the epoxy. I'd still have to use a bonding agent between the steel and the new material though, so this gets a little tricky.
Other notes:
If possible, I'd prefer not to blindly trial and error this. Even minimum quantity epoxy costs a fortune.
I might be able to get a different epoxy with different thermal expansion coefficient, but I don't believe it will be drastically different enough to solve my problems.
Reference material may be more useful to me than anything.
Thanks for your help!
I am new at this, and I'm not sure where to find documentation on it, so I figured I'd ask the community.
I have 2 materials (epoxy and steel) undergoing thermal cycling. I'm getting cracking between the two. Is there a rule of thumb to determine conditions when cracking won't likely occur? I am considering putting a 3rd piece of material between the steel and the epoxy with a thermal expansion coefficient bigger than steal, but smaller than the epoxy. I'd still have to use a bonding agent between the steel and the new material though, so this gets a little tricky.
Other notes:
If possible, I'd prefer not to blindly trial and error this. Even minimum quantity epoxy costs a fortune.
I might be able to get a different epoxy with different thermal expansion coefficient, but I don't believe it will be drastically different enough to solve my problems.
Reference material may be more useful to me than anything.
Thanks for your help!