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The Criteria for Tie-Layer Selection - Part 2 - Chemical Bond

The Criteria for Tie-Layer Selection - Part 2 - Chemical Bond Part 2 of the second installment in the series, The Criteria for Tie Layer Selection, was designed to familiarize the viewer with the complexities of the manufacturing process with regard to using glues, adhesives, and tie layers to make a wide variety of products.

In this video, Ethel Bermejo, Development Program Manager, discusses the challenges involved in choosing the correct materials for manufacturing a product, as well as the physical, functional, and environmental factors in the field that can impact the long-term integrity of a laminate bond in a finished product.

The extrusion lamination process and hot melt chemistries are just two components that are carefully considered but, in order to deliver innovative solutions, your project needs to ensure that these two elements are in synch with a client’s end-use processes. The success of the final product depends on the attention paid to the details of constructing a laminate – from selection, processing, and assembly, all the way through to designing for the final product’s use environment.

What will be discussed:

1. It Is Almost Never As Easy As It Looks
2. Real World Constraints versus Laboratory Realities
3. A Strong Bond Begins and Ends With A Strong Process
4. How To Ensure The Utmost In Bond Integrity
5. More is Needed To Guarantee Success

Bond

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