Thanks for those who read my first blog on “What is the best process to assemble materials in medical device design?” here. Here the follow up on proper joint-design for medical devices.
When joining flexible parts with rigid parts, peel stresses are present at the joint, as the dissimilar materials react differently to the loads applied. How do you know how much stress will make your device fail? And how do you know if failure will happen at the bond line?
Target is to achieve a joint stress far above the requirements set by the related device standard. Ideally, in case of joint beaks, you want the substrate to fail long before the adhesive bond is broken.
As a stress is applied to a flexible-rigid joint, the deformation of the flexible part will create peak loads concentrated at the joint edges. Under load one of the three elements will fail: rigid substrate, flexible substrate or the joining material (i.e. adhesive). If you choose the proper adhesive, the substrate would be failing first.
With our products LOCTITE AA 3951 and LOCTITE AA 3953 a higher bond strength is achieved and the substrate fails before the bond line. Watch the video below: