Pressure Sensitive Adhesives
Pressure Sensitive Adhesives
Pressure Sensitive Adhesives
PRESSURE-SENSITIVE ADHESIVES
Introduction
Because of their sticky nature, PSAs are not available as a bulk material for direct
use. By far the most common method of using PSAs is as a tape, which is a thin
Encyclopedia of Polymer Science and Technology. Copyright John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Vol. 4 PRESSURE-SENSITIVE ADHESIVES 73
coating of PSA coated on a flexible backing material. Tapes are available as rolls
(eg, box-sealing tape, transparent office tape), pads or sheets (eg, labels, stamps),
and individual pieces (eg, medical bandages, decals). The simplest tape form is
a single-sided tape in which one side of the backing is completely coated with a
PSA. More complex variations are also available: double-sided tapes, strip coated
single-sided tapes (eg, repositionable notes), pattern coated single-sided tapes (eg,
some wound dressings), and transfer tapes (ie, where the adhesive layer can be
applied to a surface without a backing). There are an extremely large number of
variations of PSA tapes available, depending on the types of PSA used, backing
materials used, and the overall construction.
A general tape construction includes a thin adhesive layer (10–750 µm) at-
tached to a film or paper backing. It is important for the adhesive to remain
attached to the backing, and in some cases it is necessary to provide a chemical
primer coating or a surface treatment to the backing to ensure this. Flame and
corona treatments are common methods to increase the surface energy of the film.
In the case of a roll of tape, the side of the tape opposite from the adhesive is usu-
ally treated with a release coating to allow for unwinding of the tape (see Fig. 1a
for schematic of laminate construction). Stacks or pads of tape may also be made
using the same laminate structure with the exception that a release liner is placed
under the bottom piece of tape in the pad. Individual pieces of tape (eg, adhesive
bandages) can also be prepared by attaching a release liner to each piece of tape
(see Fig. 1b). A transfer tape can be made by replacement of the backing with a
second release liner. This allows for the user to apply a free film of PSA to a sur-
face by removing one liner, applying the tape, and then removing the second liner.
Alternatively, a single liner that is coated on both sides can be used to prepare a
roll form of transfer tape.
Release coating
Backing
Primer
PSA
(a)
(b)
Release Surfaces. Since PSAs will adhere to many surfaces with only
light to moderate pressure, it is necessary to protect the surface of the PSA until
just prior to use. This is done by keeping the PSA in contact with a release surface,
that is, a surface that the PSA can be easily peeled from without damaging the
PSA. The force needed to remove a PSA from the release surface can vary greatly,
ranging from 5 g/25 mm width (premium release) to 2000 g/25 mm width (tight
release). The primary requirements are that the force is low enough to avoid
splitting the adhesive layer, avoid removing the adhesive from the backing, and
avoid deforming the backing during removal. The force of removal should be high
enough to avoid having the PSA accidentally come free from the release surface
before the user intends to apply it.
Typical release surfaces are made using a release coating, a microscopically
thin layer of a low surface energy material that is applied to a supporting sub-
strate. In a roll of tape the release coating is applied to the side of the backing
opposite the PSA, so that when rolled upon itself the PSA will be in contact with
the release surface (often called a low adhesion backsize in this application). Alter-
natively, the release coating may be provided on a separate liner that is discarded
after being removed from the PSA. The most common release coatings use sili-
cones, long alkyl chain branched polymers, and fluorinated polymers. In addition
to providing a low energy surface, many release coatings also contain low molecu-
lar weight material that can provide a weak boundary layer between the adhesive
and the polymerized portion of the release coating. Although effective for release
purposes, the transfer of low molecular weight compounds (particularly silicones)
to the surface of the adhesive can sometimes have a negative effect on its subse-
quent adhesion properties.
Some smooth surfaces have a low enough surface energy that they can serve
as a release surface without the addition of a special coating. Many plastics, such as
polyethylene, polypropylene, and poly(vinyl chloride), can be release surfaces for
some adhesives. Another approach for release without a special coating employs a
rough surface, such as a fabric or specially microreplicated surface, that minimizes
contact of the PSA with the surface. One should be careful about the tendency of
a PSA to flow and fill in crevices when roughness is used to provide release, since
this can lead to variations in release force with aging.
Additives. Many PSAs contain additives that, unlike tackifiers or plas-
ticizers, are not intended to affect the inherent PSA properties. Pigments, such
as titanium dioxide, are added to change a PSA’s appearance. Metal particles
or carbon black can be added to provide electrical conductivity. Drugs such
as nitroglycerin, nicotine, or estradiol are added for use in transdermal drug
delivery.
The most commonly used additives, however, are stabilizers. These are usu-
ally added to protect the PSA from thermal-oxidative degradation or from pho-
todegradation, and are generally present at low levels in a formulation (eg, about
0.5–2 wt%). Hindered phenols (eg, Irganox available from Ciba Specialty Chemi-
cals) are most commonly used to prevent thermally induced oxidation, although
phosphites and thioethers are also used, sometimes in combination with each
other. Ultraviolet absorbers, hindered amines, or simple pigments are most com-
monly added for protection from photodegradation.
Vol. 4 PRESSURE-SENSITIVE ADHESIVES 75
Types of Tape
Test Methods
Three main types of test methods are used to determine the physical properties
of PSAs: peel, tack, and shear (8) (see also ADHESION). Standard test methods
are available for all three properties, and numerous additional variations of tests
measuring these properties have also been used (9). Environmental conditions are
an extremely important factor in all PSA testing. PSAs are almost always very
sensitive to temperature. Many PSAs are also sensitive to humidity, particularly
if stored in environments where they can either absorb or lose moisture.
Peel Adhesion. In a peel adhesion test a length of tape is adhered to a
surface and then the tape is removed by lifting away from the surface in a specified
manner. The results are reported as the force required for a given width of tape. It
is important to note whether the mode of failure is adhesive (ie, between adhesive
and substrate), transfer (ie, between adhesive and film backing), or cohesive (ie,
splitting of the adhesive layer). The standard ASTM method (10) involves adher-
ing the tape to a carefully controlled stainless steel test plate and then peeling the
tape from the plate at a controlled rate of 15 cm/min and 180◦ angle (see Fig. 2).
Substrates other than steel (eg, polyethylene, phenolic resin, skin) may be used to
try to better model actual use conditions. Similarly, the rate and angle of peel may
be modified where appropriate to better match actual usage conditions. Other im-
portant factors to control in a peel test include the type of rolldown with which the
tape is applied (eg, hardness and diameter of roller, load applied, rate of rolldown,
number of passes of roller) and the amount of time the tape is allowed to dwell
prior to removal.
It should be understood that, strictly speaking, peel is a tape property rather
than a PSA property. That is, the backing or other construction of the tape can
often have a strong influence on the peel adhesion. The primary backing effects
are the influence on actual peel angle, which can differ from the nominal angle if
the backing is sufficiently stiff, and backing deformation, which can occur if the
adhesive force is sufficiently large to exceed the strength of the backing.
The peel tests described above are applied rate tests, but peel tests may also
be performed as applied load tests. The easiest applied load test to perform is to
adhere a tape to a substrate and attach a weight to one end of the tape such that
the weight hangs freely below the substrate. The rate at which the load peels the
tape from the substrate is then recorded. A low load, low rate variation on this
test is a so-called flagging test, in which a tape is wound around a cylinder and
then the rate at which the tape unwinds is measured. In this case, the only load
present is due to the weight of the tape and any stress put into the tape during
application.
Tack. Tack is in many ways similar to peel adhesion in that a bond is formed
and then broken in a lifting manner. When dealing with theoretical descriptions
of tack, all of the same considerations that are involved with peel adhesion me-
chanics are employed. In a practical sense, however, the bond formed in a tack
test typically exists for only a short time and is formed with a relatively light
amount of force when compared to a peel test. In addition, the test is typically
performed with the tape held fixed and a probe or ball being used to contact the
tape.
The most common ASTM standard method is a probe tack method (11), in
which a cylindrical probe is raised into contact with the adhesive surface of the
tape and then pulled back (see Fig. 3). The maximum force attained during re-
moval is reported as the tack value. Typical conditions involve an application
pressure of 100 g/cm2 , a contact time of 1 s, and a removal rate of 1 cm/s, but all
of these parameters may be varied with most test equipment.
Another ASTM standard method, rolling ball tack (12), involves placing a
piece of tape, adhesive side up, at the base of an inclined surface. A steel ball is
allowed to roll down the incline from a fixed height, and the distance that the ball
travels across the adhesive surface of the tape is taken as a tack value. Longer
distances of travel indicate that the tape is less tacky. Other tests involving drums,
rollers, or loops of tape have also been used, but are not as common.
Although it can be influenced by backing properties, rolling ball tack is gen-
erally considered to be fairly independent of the backing. Probe tack can be more
dependent on backing properties, but very flexible backings may be reinforced with
more rigid backings in order to reduce the influence of backing on the tack value.
More sophisticated tack tests have been developed that measure force throughout
the entire debonding process in conjunction with video observation of the bond
(13) or using atomic force microscopy as a probe (14).
Fig. 4. Shear holding power test. Side view and front view.
deformation. The backing deformation can cause curling or buckling of the tape
that can also lead to the introduction of additional peel forces.
Rheological Tests. Other rheological tests that measure viscoelastic
properties are available. Dynamic mechanical rheometry (DMA or DMTA when
temperature is included) involves a parallel plate rheometer that can deform a
disk of material in a shearing motion. This is done as a function of frequency of
shearing and often with varying temperature. The shear storage and loss moduli,
G and G , or the dynamic viscosity can be obtained with this test. These rheologi-
cal properties can be related to tack, peel, and shear, and have found much use in
development and analysis of PSAs (17). Another way to obtain shear modulus is
to use a double-overlap shear apparatus in which the load is applied to a slip plate
instead of directly to the tape. This configuration removes both the peel forces as-
sociated with single-overlap shear and the potential deformation that may occur
in the standard shear holding test.
Materials
There are three major classes of polymers used in PSAs today: block copolymer,
natural rubber, and acrylic. A number of other polymers used in smaller, specialty
applications include silicones, polyisobutylenes, polyolefins, styrene-butadiene,
poly(vinyl alkyl ether)s, and polyurethanes.
Block-Copolymer Rubbers. Block copolymer rubbers are thermoplas-
tic elastomers that are the most widely used class of PSAs (see ELASTOMERS,
THERMOPLASTIC). The most commonly used are ABA block copolymers, where A
is polystyrene and B is a polydiene. Polyisoprene (R = CH3 ) and polybutadiene
(R = H) are the most common B polymers, giving SIS and SBS copolymers, re-
spectively (see BUTADIENE POLYMERS; ISOPRENE POLYMERS).
initial adhesion and by the ability of the adhesive to deform and absorb energy
upon removal. Increasing tackifier levels will generally increase adhesion because
of the dilution of the polymer network, which increases molecular mobility and
reduces the PSA storage modulus. However, increasing tackifier will also increase
the T g of the PSA, and if the T g reaches or exceeds the use temperature then the
material will entirely lose PSA properties.
Antioxidants are usually employed to prevent oxidation of the double bond
in either of the polydienes. Specialty grades are available where the polydiene
has been hydrogenated, which gives much better chemical stability and uv resis-
tance. Multiarm and star-block copolymers are some examples of specialty copoly-
mers that can be used to modify the performance of block copolymer adhesives
(19).
These PSAs are still commonly referred to in much of industry as Kraton (a
trademark of Shell Chemical) adhesives, although block-copolymer rubbers are
also available worldwide from several other major sources: Dexco, Enichem, and
Nippon-Zeon. The most common uses of block-copolymer PSAs are in packaging
tapes, although they find use in nearly all types of PSA applications.
Natural Rubber. Natural rubber is obtained from the Hevea brasiliensis
tree as a latex. It is primarily cis-1,4-polyisoprene with small amounts of bound
proteins and other contaminants (see RUBBER, NATURAL).
The latex is ammoniated, coagulated, and air dried or smoked to obtain gum
rubber. As with most other rubbers, a tackifier must be blended with natural rub-
ber in order to produce a PSA, since the rubber itself has a very low glass-transition
temperature (T g ∼ −70◦ C) and a high shear storage plateau modulus. The molec-
ular weight of the input rubber is quite high, greater than 1,000,000 g/mol,
and so the rubber is usually milled between steel rolls to break the rubber chains
and reduce the molecular weight to make subsequent processing easier (20).
When coated from solvent, natural rubber can be used to make a PSA with
a combination of good cohesive shear strength and the ability to dissipate stress
within a bond. This is due to the ability of the high molecular weight of the poly-
isoprene to establish good shear strength without the need for cross-linking. The
lack of cross-linking aids in stress relaxation. Because of the double bond in poly-
isoprene, natural rubber is subject to oxidation, and antioxidants are typically
added to the adhesive formulations.
Natural rubber can also be formulated and coated directly from latex, al-
though the costs are typically higher than compounding of gum rubber and coating
from solvent. Hot-melt processing of natural rubber is a newer technology that
offers the possibility of efficient, solvent-free production (21). Because the high
molecular weights of the natural rubber will not survive a hot-melt extrusion or
mixing process, it is necessary to post-cure hot-melt natural rubber adhesives
with, for example, electron beam radiation curing if high cohesive strength is
necessary.
82 PRESSURE-SENSITIVE ADHESIVES Vol. 4
The most common uses of natural rubber PSAs are in masking tapes, pack-
aging tapes, duct tapes, and other cloth tapes.
Acrylics. Acrylic adhesives are copolymers produced from esters of acrylic
acid (see ACRYLIC ESTER POLYMERS). An acrylic copolymer suitable for use in a
PSA must contain a significant fraction of a monomer that gives a homopolymer
with a low glass-transition temperature (T g ). This monomer will typically give a
homopolymer with a T g less than −20◦ C and usually in the range of −40 to −80◦ C.
It is this low T g monomer that gives the PSA its soft, tacky properties. The most
common monomers used to give low T g polymers are 2-ethylhexyl acrylate, isooctyl
acrylate (3M Company manufactures isooctyl acrylate for internal consumption),
and butyl acrylate.
The lack of double bonds gives it good chemical stability. PIB varies from
a liquid to a rubber as the molecular weight is shifted from low (<5000 g/mol)
to high (>100,000 g/mol). PIB PSAs are usually prepared as a mixture of PIB
rubber with a tackifier or oil in a manner similar to other rubber-based PSAs.
Low molecular weight PIB can also be used as a tackifier in blends with high
molecular weight PIB or in blends with other rubbers as well. One advantage of a
high and low molecular weight blend of PIBs is that this takes full advantage of
the inherent chemical stability. These adhesives are typically used in applications
where good aging or chemical resistance is needed (eg, pipe wrap, electrical tapes)
or in medical applications where low skin irritation potential is beneficial. Among
their disadvantages is that they are difficult to cross-link, so that they usually have
low cohesive strength, and very high molecular weight PIBs need to be solvent
processed since they become difficult to hot-melt process (27).
Polyolefins. A variety of amorphous poly(α-olefins) have been used as the
base elastomer in PSAs.
do not yet have the wide range of formulation flexibility that can be achieved with
block-copolymer or acrylic PSAs.
Tackifiers/Plasticizers
The small chain hydrocarbon tackifiers are oligomers with molecular weights
in the range of several hundred to 2000 g/mol. They are typically obtained from
petroleum feed streams and fall into three general classes. The most common C-5
aliphatic hydrocarbons are cis- and trans-piperylene and isoprene.
The similarity in chemical structure to isoprene explains why these are quite
compatible with natural rubber and synthetic isoprene-based polymers (or block
copolymers). The C-9 aromatic hydrocarbon resins include indene- and styrene-
based oligomers. Because of the difference in chemical structure these will asso-
ciate with the end-blocks in S–I–S copolymers, and thus have a reinforcing effect
and improve high temperature performance. Finally, mixtures of aliphatic and
aromatic hydrocarbon resins are commonly used as a way to tailor compatibility
and physical properties of the resultant PSAs.
Terpenes are similar to the aliphatic hydrocarbon resins in that the most
common, α- and β-pinene, can be considered to be dimers of isoprene.
86 PRESSURE-SENSITIVE ADHESIVES Vol. 4
Like rosins, terpenes are derived from pine trees (via turpentine) or other
natural sources, such as citrus peels.
The difference between plasticizers and tackifiers is somewhat arbitrary and
the effect of this difference is described below in the section on Physical Properties.
Plasticizers are typically lower in molecular weight and melting or softening point
than are tackifiers. Hydrocarbon oils including aromatic, naphthenic, and paraf-
finic are commonly used with rubber-based adhesives. Phthalates, such as dioctyl
phthalate or dibutyl phthalate, are more typically used in small amounts with
acrylics. Since plasticizers are usually low molecular weight compounds, there is
often more latitude in the chemical types that will be compatible with the base
polymer because of the contribution from entropy of mixing.
Physical Properties
By definition a PSA must have physical properties that differ from most ordinarily
encountered materials. It should behave like a liquid when it is forming a bond
with a substrate, but after application it should behave like a solid in order to
retain the bond. This dual liquid–solid behavior should be present without the
need to make any chemical or physical modifications to the PSA, but should rather
be an intrinsic material property.
When acting as a liquid it must have an appropriate surface energy that
will allow it to wet a substrate. Liquids with appropriate surface energy have
the capability to easily wet a substrate because of the high degree of molecular
mobility that they possess. Except in very limited circumstances though, (eg, two
smooth glass plates “bonded” together by a thin layer of liquid), they do not have
enough strength to keep two surfaces bonded together. So in order to have the
needed strength to be a PSA, a material must be a solid, but it must be capable
of behaving like a liquid during the time it takes to form a bond (of the order
of 1 s).
Polymers are the only class of materials that possess this combination
of properties. Because of their extended, chain-like molecular structure they
form networks (which may or may not be cross-linked) that resist large-
scale molecular motion, and therefore provide solid-like behavior. The por-
tions of the polymer molecule in between network junctions, however, can
undergo small-scale motion that is similar to that of a liquid when viewed
on a short time scale. An important feature of all PSAs is the glass tran-
sition temperature T g of its polymeric components. If the PSA is cooled be-
low its T g , then it will behave like a glassy solid, since even the small-
scale, between-network motions will be frozen. Above its T g , though, the
Vol. 4 PRESSURE-SENSITIVE ADHESIVES 87
Fig. 5. Storage modulus of rubber (dotted line) and rubber+resin PSA (solid line) as a
function of temperature. To convert kPa to psi, multiply by 0.145.
Ge ∼
= v2 (ρ/Me )RT(1 + 2.5c + 14.1c2 )
1 x1 x2 xn
= + +···+ (1)
CTg Tg1 Tg2 Tgn
increasing peel adhesion force. A transition will occur at a sufficiently high peel
rate where the adhesive can now build up enough stored elastic energy to cleanly
and smoothly remove from the substrate. Beyond this transition rate the peel force
again increases with increasing peel rate (shown by the solid line) until another
transition occurs to “shocky” peel. This “shocky” peel is related to the increased
stiffening and glass-like behavior of the adhesive at increasing peel rate. In a roll
unwind case, the unwinding tape will accelerate as it passes this shocky peel tran-
sition since the peel force will now begin to decrease with increasing rate. Since
most peel is performed by pulling the tab end of a tape at a constant rate, the tape
unwinding from the roll will move faster than the tab being pulled until slack
accumulates in the tape, causing the effective peel rate at the roll to drop to near
zero. As the tab end continues to be pulled the slack is taken up and this process
is repeated to give a jerky or shocky peel. The peel force shown in Figure 3 for the
shocky region (dashed line) is an average peel force, since the instantaneous peel
forces measured will vary greatly.
A specific type of adhesive failure is “lift” which is a very slow low-angle peel
of a tape at its edges. The optimal physical properties to resist lift often differ
from those necessary to provide high short-term peel adhesion. Longer time (low
frequency) material properties become important, and the ability of the adhesive
or backing to relax stress over time also becomes important, since stresses im-
parted to the tape during application can lead to long-term failure if they cannot
be dissipated.
Fig. 6. Peel force vs peel rate schematic showing cohesive failure (dotted line), adhesive
failure (solid line), and shocky peel (dashed line).
90 PRESSURE-SENSITIVE ADHESIVES Vol. 4
General Manufacture
A wide variety of methods have been used to make PSAs and PSA tapes, rang-
ing from multistep processes to completely integrated manufacturing methods.
Synthesis of the PSA (or PSA-component-like rubber) can be a solvent-based pro-
cess (eg, organic solution, emulsion, or suspension polymerization) or a solventless
process (eg, reactive extrusion, bulk polymerization).
A common thread through nearly all PSA tape manufacture is a pro-
cessing step where the PSA is present as part or all of a liquid phase (dis-
tinguished from the “liquid-like” behavior it shows during use) that may be
applied to a surface in a thin coating. This liquid phase is obtained in three
primary ways. The PSA is dissolved as a solution in organic solvent or water
and the solvent or water is removed by drying after the coating step. The PSA
is heated to a temperature at which it becomes molten (ie, hot-melt processing)
and the PSA is cooled after the coating step. The PSA is formed by coating low
molecular weight liquid compounds that may be polymerized in place after coat-
ing. General industry trends are toward solventless processes since these elim-
inate the use of hazardous organic solvents and the high energy usage due to
drying.
The PSA is usually coated directly onto the backing film, although it
may also be coated onto the release liner and subsequently laminated to the
backing film. Coating on liner is usually done with soft or stretchy backings
that can deform during oven drying or with cure-in-place systems where the
backing may absorb the liquid prepolymer mixture before polymerization can
occur.
Economic Aspects
Of the three major classes of polymers in use today, acrylics make up the largest
volume of material at 33% of the total PSA market. Synthetic block-copolymer
elastomer represents 25% of the total PSA market. Since these are almost uni-
versally compounded with tackifying resins, the amount of PSA produced using
block copolymers could be twice as large as the amount of elastomer used. Natu-
ral rubber represents 22% of the total PSA market, but is also compounded with
resin to produce a PSA, and so the total amount of PSA produced is also larger
(45). This represents a shift toward acrylics from 10 years ago when the relative
Vol. 4 PRESSURE-SENSITIVE ADHESIVES 91
amounts of acrylic, block copolymer, and natural rubber elastomer was 23, 29, and
28%, respectively (46).
Estimated production (47) volumes (by area coated) of tapes and labels in
1997 were 7.5 × 109 m2 in the United States, 7.7 × 109 m2 in Europe, and (6–
8) × 109 m2 in Asia. Estimated use of PSAs (by mass) in 1998 was 250,000 t in
the United States and 295,000 t in Europe. Estimated sales volumes of pressure-
sensitive products in 1999 were $11 × 109 m2 in the United States, $8.4 × 109 m2
in Europe, and $1.9 × 109 m2 in Japan, with global growth rates for these markets
estimated at between 4 and 6% annually for tapes and between 7 and 11% annually
for labels (47,48).
BIBLIOGRAPHY
“Pressure-Sensitive Adhesives and Products” in EPSE 2nd ed., Vol. 13, pp. 345–368, by
S. C. Temin, Consultant.
1. D. Satas, in D. Satas, ed., Handbook of Pressure Sensitive Adhesive Technology, 3rd
ed., Satas & Associates, Warwick, R.I., 1999, p. 1.
2. U.S. Pat. 5412035 (May 2, 1995), E. E. Schmitt and co-workers (to Landec Co.).
3. WO 0061692 (Oct. 19, 2000), C. Ansell (to Smith & Nephew, Plc.).
4. U.S. Pat. 5032637 (July 16, 1991), D. J. Therriault and J. E. Workinger (to Adhesives
Research, Inc.).
5. U.S. Pat. 5352516 (Oct. 4, 1994), D. J. Therriault and M. J. Zajaczkowski (to Adhesives
Research, Inc.).
6. U.S. Pat. 5336207 (Aug. 9, 1994), M. A. Norcia (to Smith & Nephew United,
Inc.).
7. U.S. Pat. 6106937 (Aug. 22, 2000), M. D. Hamerski (to Minnesota Mining and Manu-
facturing Co.).
8. R. P. Muny, Adhesives & Sealants Industry 42 (Feb. 2000).
9. Test Methods for Pressure Sensitive Adhesive Tapes, Pressure Sensitive Tape Council,
Chicago, 1996.
10. ASTM D3330, Annual Book of ASTM Standards, Vol. 15.09, 1999.
11. ASTM D2979, Annual Book of ASTM Standards, Vol. 15.06, 1999.
12. ASTM D3121, Annual Book of ASTM Standards, Vol. 15.06, 1999.
13. A. Zosel, in Proceedings of the Pressure Sensitive Tape Council: 23nd Annual Technical
Seminar, New Orleans, La., Pressure Sensitive Tape Council, Chicago, 2000, p. 193.
14. A. Paiva and co-workers, Macromolecules 33, 1878 (2000).
15. ASTM D3654, Annual Book of ASTM Standards, Vol. 15.09, 1999.
16. A. V. Pocius, Adhesion and Adhesives Technology: An Introduction, Carl Hanser Verlag,
Munich, 1997, pp. 42–45.
17. S. G. Chu, in D. Satas, ed., Handbook of Pressure Sensitive Adhesive Technology, 2nd
ed., Van Nostrand Reinhold Co., Inc., New York, 1989, p. 158.
18. U.S. Pat. 4096203 (June 20, 1978), D. J. St. Clair (to Shell Oil Co.).
19. U.S. Pat. 5412031 (May 2, 1995), J. Ma and M. K. Nestegard (to Minnesota Mining and
Manufacturing Co.).
20. R. E. Bennett, in A. K. Bhowmick, M. M. Hall, and H. A. Benarey, eds., Rubber Products
Manufacturing Technology, Marcel Dekker, Inc., New York, 1994, p. 855.
21. U.S. Pat. 5549033 (July 23, 1996), T. D. Bredahl and co-workers (to Minnesota Mining
and Manufacturing Co.).
92 PRESSURE-SENSITIVE ADHESIVES Vol. 4
22. Ger. Pat. 575327 (1933), W. Bauer (to Roehm and Haas AG).
23. U.S. Pat. 2884126 (Apr. 28, 1959), E. W. Ulrich (to Minnesota Mining and Manufac-
turing Co.). Reissued as U.S. Pat. RE24906 (Dec. 13, 1960).
24. G. Odian, Principles of Polymerization, 3rd ed., John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York,
1991, pp. 302, 341.
25. U.S. Pat. 5670557 (Sept. 23, 1997), T. M. Dietz and co-workers (to Minnesota Mining
and Manufacturing Co.).
26. L. A. (Sobieski) Jones, in Ref. 1, p. 550.
27. J. J. Higgins, F. C. Jagisch, and K. O. McElrath, in Ref. 1, p. 321.
28. Pressure-Sensitive Adhesives Based on Amorphous Polyolefin from Eastman Chemical
Company, Publication WA-23A, Feb. 1999.
29. U.S. Pat. 5112882 (May 12, 1992), G. N. Babu and co-workers (to Minnesota Mining
and Manufacturing Co.).
30. J. A. Schlademan, in Proceedings of the Pressure Sensitive Tape Council: 22nd Annual
Technical Seminar, Washington, D.C., Pressure Sensitive Tape Council, Chicago, 1999,
p. 87.
31. G. Kraus and K. W. Rollmann, J. Appl. Polym. Sci. 21, 3311 (1977).
32. G. Kraus, K. W. Rollmann, and R. A. Gray, J. Adhesn. 10, 221 (1979).
33. P. R. Couchman, Macromolecules 11, 1156 (1978).
34. A. S. Cantor, J. Appl. Polym. Sci. 77, 826 (2000).
35. J. Comyn, Adhesion Science, Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, U.K., 1997,
pp. 3–10.
36. Ref. 16, p. 140.
37. B. Z. Newby and M. K. Chaudhury, Langmuir 13, 1805 (1997).
38. A. N. Gent and C. W. Lin, J. Adhesn. 30, 1 (1989).
39. W. F. Parsons, M. A. Faust, and L. E. Brady, J. Polym. Sci. 16, 775 (1978).
40. A. N. Gent and G. R. Hamed, Polym. Eng. Sci. 17, 462 (1977).
41. K. R. Shull and A. J. Crosby, in Proceedings of the 23rd Annual Meeting of the Adhesion
Society, Myrtle Beach, S.C., Adhesion Society, Blacksburg, Va., 2000, p. 113.
42. A. J. Crosby and K. R. Shull, J. Polym. Sci., Part B: Polym. Phys. 37, 3455 (1999).
43. E. H. Andrews and A. J. Kinloch, Proc. R. Soc. London, Ser. A 332, 385 (1973).
44. C. Creton, in H. E. H. Meijer, ed., Materials Science and Technology: A Comprehensive
Treatment, Vol. 18, Wiley-VCH, New York, 1997, p. 708.
45. D. Satas, in Ref. 1, p. 6.
46. D. Satas, in Ref. 17, p. 4.
47. R. A. Higham, in R. A. Higham, ed., Pressure Sensitive Industry: Markets and Technol-
ogy Yearbook: 1999, Data Transcripts, Surrey, U.K., 1999.
48. J. Talmage, Adhesive Technol. 10 (Sept. 2000).
GENERAL REFERENCES
D. Satas, ed., Handbook of Pressure Sensitive Adhesive Technology, 3rd ed., Satas & Asso-
ciates, Warwick, R.I., 1999.
I. Benedek, Development and Manufacture of Pressure-Sensitive Products, Marcel Dekker,
Inc., New York, 1999.
I. Skeist, Handbook of Adhesives, 3rd ed., Van Nostrand Reinhold Co., Inc., New York, 1990.
A. V. Pocius, Adhesion and Adhesives Technology: An Introduction, Carl Hanser Verlag,
Munich, 1997.
Vol. 4 PRESSURE-SENSITIVE ADHESIVES 93
ADAM S. CANTOR
3M Healthcare Markets