The aim of the work presented in this thesis was to investigate whether the
adhesion of glues and lacquers to wood could be studied using dynamic
mechanical thermal analysis (DMTA). This method has been widely used to
study interactions in polymer blends, copolymers and in polymeric composites
but very few investigations had been done on solid wood. DMTA has the
ability to give basic information on polymeric structures, which is an
advantage over other test methods for adhesion.
In this thesis pine wood (Pinus sylvestris) and several glues and lacquers
have been studied using DMTA in the tensile mode. Both wood and pure
polymers have been studied as well as polymers that have been polymerised in
situ in wood, applied with a brush or as glue between wooden strips. The
adhesion has then been studied and verified using fractography tests viewed
with scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The adhesion has been characterised
as "poor at the cell wall level" when there was a noticeable separation
between the adhesive and the wood substrate as viewed in SEM. If the
fracture occurred in the polymer or in wood cell walls, i.e. not at the
interface, and no smooth polymer surfaces could be found, the adhesion was
characterised as "good at the cell wall level".
The primary result was that the interaction as measured with DMTA between
wood and polymers with high interaction and adhesion to wood showed a
decrease in glass transition temperature (Tg) as compared to the Tg of the
pure polymer material. Examples of high adhesion and interaction are the
interaction between wood and a hydrophilic acrylate polymerised in situ from
monomeric methacrylates. High interaction and adhesion was also found for
two commercial polyurethane alkyd lacquers. No decrease in Tg was noted for
polymers with low adhesion and interaction with wood. An example of low
adhesion is polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) polymerised in situ in wood. Low
interaction and adhesion was also observed for a commercial polyvinyl
acetate (PVAc) and wood. No change in interaction could be observed for the
PMMA to wood when wood was made more unpolar (more lipophilic) by
acetylation or silylation. The hydrophilic acrylate showed an increased
interaction to silylated wood but unchanged interaction to acetylated wood.
The decrease in Tg for polymers showing high interaction and adhesion to
wood is probably due to an increase of the free volume in the polymer. An
increase in free volume can be due to tensile forces developing during
polymerisation, drying or curing of the glues, lacquers and acrylate
polymers.
This thesis shows that DMTA is an interesting method to obtain a basic
understanding of adhesion phenomena and should be of interest for
manufacturers of glues and paints and lacquers, and especially for
thermoplastic adhesives. However, further experimental investigation is
needed for the potential to test load-bearing glues.