glueability
Glueability is the extent to which two or more materials can form a durable bond when joined with an adhesive. It depends on the interaction between adhesive and substrate, surface properties, and processing conditions. Factors include surface energy and cleanliness, porosity and roughness, chemical compatibility between adhesive and substrate, and environmental exposure during service. Substrates such as metals, wood, ceramics, and plastics respond differently to adhesives; plastics like polyethylene and polypropylene are often difficult to bond without surface treatment. Adhesive choice (epoxies, cyanoacrylates, polyurethanes, silicones, hot melts) and the curing mechanism (ambient, heat, UV, moisture cure) also influence glueability.
Surface preparation, including cleaning, degreasing, roughening, and priming, substantially improves glueability. Treatments such as corona discharge,
Glueability is assessed by mechanical tests that measure bond strength and durability, such as lap shear strength
Common adhesive classes each have typical substrates and limitations. Epoxies offer high strength and chemical resistance
Practical considerations include selecting an adhesive suited to the substrate, controlling temperature and humidity, and ensuring
Limitations include that some materials, notably certain plastics and untreated metals, resist adhesion without specialized treatment,