2026-06-08 Silicone pressure-sensitive adhesives (PSA) for PTFE high-temperature tapes vary widely in high-temperature aging performance. Methylphenyl silicone PSA retains >85% peel strength after 250°C/7 days, while standard methyl type drops to 50-70%. Addition-cured (hydrosilylation) systems offer much better stability than peroxide-cured. For continuous 200°C+ service, select addition-cured high-phenyl grades.
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2026-06-08 Thermally conductive PTFE pressure-sensitive adhesive (PSA) tapes must conduct heat while staying sticky. Adding fillers improves thermal conductivity but hurts adhesion. Optimal balance uses spherical coarse particles (as conductive skeleton) blended with fine particles (to fill voids), keeping total filler loading just above the percolation threshold. Avoid flakes and fibers; they kill tack.
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2026-06-05 PTFE high-temperature tape serves the PV industry in two distinct roles: process consumable (prevents EVA overflow adhesion on laminators, solder mask) and long-life insulation (busbar wrap, junction box fixation). For permanent internal use, tapes must pass IEC 61215: 1000-2000h damp heat, UV, thermal cycling (-40°C to +85°C), with silicone PSA and shrinkage <1%.
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2026-06-04 PTFE high-temperature tape applied to heat-sealing knives and sealing strips delivers four core values: prevents molten plastic adhesion (eliminates downtime), protects expensive sealing dies, homogenizes heat/pressure for consistent seals, and reduces film friction. Fiberglass-backed tape (0.13-0.25 mm) with silicone PSA (≥260°C) is recommended. Anti-static black tape for high-speed lines.
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2026-06-03 The water vapor barrier property of PTFE adhesive tape is determined primarily by coating defects (micropores, microcracks, fiber wicking) rather than PTFE’s intrinsic hydrophobicity. Pure PTFE film offers only medium WVTR. Multi-layer coating and lamellar fillers (mica, glass flakes) create a labyrinth effect, drastically reducing vapor transmission. For high-humidity sealing, specify densified coatings.
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2026-06-03 Creep resistance of PTFE high-temperature adhesive tape under long-term constant load (especially at 200-260°C) is determined by two factors: silicone PSA crosslink density (higher crosslinking prevents flow) and substrate type (fiberglass-reinforced PTFE resists cold creep; pure PTFE film creeps). Uncrosslinked adhesive fails rapidly at high heat. Thicker adhesive layers increase creep risk.
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2026-06-02 For PTFE high-temperature tape used in abrasive sliding friction applications, standard non-stick and heat resistance are insufficient. Key selection criteria: Taber abrasion loss (<15 mg/1000 cycles), filled modified PTFE coating (carbon/graphite/MoS₂), PV limit data, substrate strength (≥200 N/cm), and mating surface roughness (Ra 0.2-0.4 μm). Proper edge protection and full bonding are critical for longevity.
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2026-06-01 PTFE substrate is inherently salt spray resistant (water absorption <0.01%). However, overall tape performance depends on adhesive type: silicone PSA withstands marine environments (500-1000h salt spray tests,>80% peel retention); acrylic PSA fails. Proper surface treatment, bubble-free application, and edge sealing with silicone sealant are critical for long-term reliability on offshore platforms and vessels.
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2026-05-28 PTFE fiberglass tape requires three key safety certifications: UL (electrical and flame safety), FDA (food contact compliance), and ISO 9001:2015 (quality management). Certified tapes offer consistent performance, longer service life, and lower total cost of ownership despite higher upfront cost. Always verify certifications directly with issuing bodies.
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2026-05-28 PTFE high-temperature tape is used across three medical application tiers: sterilization equipment protection (autoclave trays, heat-seal packaging), instrument surface treatment (low-friction coating, electrical insulation), and implantable devices (vascular grafts, sutures). Biocompatibility is verified via ISO 10993, and FDA 21 CFR 177.1550 establishes foundational material safety.
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