Abstract

Abstract Adhesion of a polystyrene coating to solvent cleaned steel is increased two-fold by addition of 0.5% wt/wt of aminosilane (A1120). A study has been carried out on the coating-substrate interfacial chemistry to gain an understanding of the mechanism of adhesion promotion. It is shown that in peel experiments the coating fails adhesively between the polystyrene and an adsorbed layer of aminosilane on the steel surface. The improvement in adhesion results from displacement by the silane of the 1.4 nm thick layer of residual carbonaceous contamination on the steel surface. It is proposed that this leads to a stronger substrate-coating interaction either through improved intermolecular contact between the segregated silane and the polymer or through secondary bonding between the amine groups of the silane and the polarisable aromatic rings of the polystyrene.

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