Re: Anaerobic conductive epoxy?
- From: "Simon Kay" <simon@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 27 Sep 2005 21:47:30 +0000 (UTC)
Don,
Conductive 2-pack epoxies should cure fully even in the absence of air.
Are you using a solvented epoxy? Many flooring system would have solvents
added to assist flow - it could be this that is failing to evaporate.
Also you will need to have an idea of the level of conductivity you require;
carbon loaded materials tend to be low conductivity but reasonably cheap,
whereas high conductivity materials - often loaded with silver, tin, nickel
etc - can be astronomically, eye-wateringly, expensive.
Rgds,
Simon
"eromlignod" <eromlignod@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1127846016.395817.224720@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Hi guys:
>
> I need to glue together two large sheets of a non-porous material
> face-to-face with a conductive or static-dissipative adhesive. I have
> tried it with ordinary static-dissipative floor epoxy, but it never
> fully sets up and remains gooey and non-conductive, even when applied
> very thinly. In areas where it is exposed to air it sets up fine.
>
> Is there another type of conductive adhesive I could use that doesn't
> require air to solidify?
>
> Thanks for any replies.
>
> Don
>
.
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