Thermal Spray Coatings as an Adhesion Promoter in Metal/FRP Joints

2018 
In this study, various structuring methods for creating adhesion by mechanical interlocking in the interface of metal/FRP (fiber-reinforced polymer) joints are investigated. A novel processing route using thermal spray coatings as additive structure is presented. Different coating systems are first assessed by axial loading tests with spray-coated plungers for the evaluation of the additive layer adhesion on the metallic base material. Additional microstructures, produced by different abrasive processes (corundum blasting, laser structuring, and fine milling) are compared with the additive structures. All surface structures are characterized by electron microscopy for two sheet materials: DC06 and AA6016-T4. The abrasive structures show a significant material dependence, while the selected coating system offers the adjustment to different base materials by an independent surface layer. The structured metal sheets were further joined to glass-fiber-reinforced polyamide 6 (PA6) by hot pressing to evaluate the interface properties in tensile shear tests. The results confirm a suitability of thermal spray coatings for providing a high bonding strength in metal/FRP joints for both investigated metallic substrate materials.
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