Mechanism of wrinkle formation in curing coatings

Soumendra K. Basu, L. E. Scriven, L. F. Francis, A. V. McCormick

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

89 Scopus citations

Abstract

Five wrinkling coating systems - ranging from liquid-applied, thermally cured acrylic-melamine and alkyd systems to powder-applied, thermally cured epoxy and polyester systems to a liquid-applied, UV-cured acrylate system - were investigated by optical microscopy and mechanical profilometry. Each system had multi-functional reactants and cross-linkers, and produced a highly cross-linked coating. Upon curing, each appeared to produce a depth-wise gradient in degree of solidification and thereby developed a mechanical skin. The presence of a mechanical skin was demonstrated by physically probing the top surface of the semi-cured coating. Under externally applied compressive stresses, the skin showed wrinkled patterns. It is hypothesized that during cure compressive elastic stress developed in the skin when unreacted low-molecular weight oligomer below the skin diffuses up into the oligomer-depleted cross-linking skin and tends to swell it. This compressive stress, once above a critical value, could be relieved by out-of-plane deformation or buckling that wrinkles the skin. Experimental support for the hypothesis is gathered by wrinkling a homogeneous skin solely by absorption of unreacted material, and by noting the similarity of patterns between curing wrinkled coatings and those produced by compressed elastic films on elastic or viscous sub-layers. Moreover, experiments agree with buckling analysis of a skin-sublayer system, which predicts a linear relationship between the critical wrinkle wavelength and skin thickness.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1-16
Number of pages16
JournalProgress in Organic Coatings
Volume53
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - May 1 2005

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This research was sponsored by the Industrial Partnership for Research in Interfacial and Materials Engineering (IPRIME, http://www.iprime.umn.edu/ ). We are thankful to Dr. Veronica Reichert and her colleagues at Morton Powder Coatings Company, and Dr. Mahendra Dabral of Atofina for the valuable discussions, and for providing samples of different wrinkling coatings. We are also grateful to Wieslaw Suszynski for his assistance with photography.

Keywords

  • Buckling
  • Cross-linking
  • Depth-wise gradient
  • In-plane stress
  • Mechanical skin
  • Surface texture
  • Swelling

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Mechanism of wrinkle formation in curing coatings'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this