Hi, I'm Dave Long from Staticworx.
Today is April 20th and
I decided it was time
to talk about a topic that for some reason
always gets ignored, and
that is conductive adhesives.
Everyone focuses on the floor tile.
Everyone focuses on conductivity,
which is what this meter measures,
but one of the things that
everyone seems to forget
is what's holding the floor in place?
And how long will that product last?
Because if you think about a floor,
everything about that
floor that means anything
has to do with the bond
and how well it's secured
to the substrate.
So what I did this morning
is I took four adhesive technologies
and these are conductive adhesives.
So I took an acrylic adhesive.
I took a black carbon-loaded
releasable adhesive,
I took a fiber-loaded releasable adhesive,
and I took our brand
new StatBond permanent
pressure-sensitive adhesive.
And the reason I put all
four of these together,
and excuse the mess, but
I'm in my living room
and I had to be very careful
not to destroy my own house
while I was doing this,
the first thing I wanted to do is show you
that all of these
adhesives are conductive.
So what I did when I spread them
is I overspread them on one another,
so this conductive adhesive
is touching this one,
is touching this one,
is touching this one.
I put copper at both ends,
I put two probes down and I
measured the conductivity.
And if you look, the electrical continuity
from here to here, the resistance
is 1.6 times 10 to the fourth (10E4).
That means that every member of the chain
has to be conductive,
otherwise I wouldn't get
a measurement like that.
So I guess for starters,
from a conductivity perspective,
all four of these
adhesives would do exactly
what we need it to do in an
ESD flooring installation.
So what I'm going to do is
I'm going to pick these apart,
because I want you to think about adhesive
as the most important part of your project
instead of what you're
usually thinking about,
which is the floor.
So here we have the wet-set conductive
acrylic adhesive.
When I say wet-set, that
means that when you trowel
it on the floor, before it
dries you put tiles on it
and then you roll those tiles.
When you roll the tiles
- and bear in mind,
because these are conductive floors,
a lot of times the tile
color is very light -
this adhesive is going to
ooze up between the seams
once in a while.
It's going to get on the roller.
In order to get this
mess off of this tile,
you're going to have
to use mineral spirits
and it's going to affect
the gloss on this tile.
So if you're not careful
with wet-set adhesives,
you've got a mess on your hands.
If you are careful with wet-set adhesives,
they take much longer to work with
than these other three adhesives.
So when you're thinking about a project,
one of the things you want to think about,
especially if you're an installer,
is how is the adhesive going to affect
the performance of my crew?
And how much am I going to
have to charge the customer
to add to the extra annoyances
of working with a
particular type of product?
Because I'm going to tell you right now,
if you're putting flooring
in a grocery store,
or a retail chain, or a hotel,
you'd be using dry adhesives,
not wet-set adhesives.
So that brings me to the next adhesive.
This one's been around for a long time.
If you notice, it's got
carbon in it, it's very dark.
The problem with this adhesive
is that when you work
with it, if you touch it,
it gets on your fingers,
it gets on the tiles.
If you step in it, you've got
footprints all over the place.
This particular adhesive
is a common one used
for installing ESD carpet tiles,
sometimes ESD Vinyl tiles,
but that's the mess you're
going to be dealing with.
In order to get that off, you've
got to use mineral spirits.
Third adhesive.
This is a releasable pressure-sensitive adhesive
with fibers in it.
By the way, the reason I did a sloppy job
at putting this on the substrate
was I wanted you to
see these little globs.
This has a lot of conductive fiber in it
and as a result, the fiber
gets into the notches
in your trowel, I mean, look
how small these notches are.
This is the trowel you would use
to put down this adhesive.
That means as you're putting tiles down,
you've got to pay
attention to these globs,
you've got to clean them
up and throw them away.
So this adhesive has been commonly used
for holding conductive
vinyl tile for many years.
The downside to it, it's releasable.
That means that it doesn't
have the shear strength
that you'd really like from
a super strong adhesive
like the first one.
So to give you some idea,
this adhesive has a shear
strength of over 30 pounds.
This adhesive, at its best,
has a shear strength of 13 pounds.
That brings me to our new adhesive.
So this is a conductive
pressure-sensitive permanent adhesive.
That means that when I put tiles into it,
I'm not going to get 'em off the floor
without damaging the substrate
just like I would with the first adhesive.
The big advantage, when
I apply this adhesive,
I apply it and I let it dry.
That means I don't get a mess like this.
If I get any adhesive on
the tile, like I did here,
because I purposely smeared it on here,
I get that off with soap and water.
So here we're using mineral spirits,
which dull the tile, to clean it.
Here we're using soap and water,
which is what you're going to use
to clean the floor to begin with.
So now what I'm going to
do is I'm going to show you
the strength of this adhesive.
Like I said, for years
we and other companies
used this adhesive,
and the problem with it
is it takes five days for it to set up
and give you a strong bond.
Yesterday,
I applied this adhesive
to this piece of pressure-treated lumber
and I attached a 25-pound dumbbell.
So what I'm going to do
is I'm going to come over
in front of my little podium here
and I'm going to take
the 25-pound dumbbell
and I'm going to hold it upside down.
See the bond?
That's what you're looking for.
When you apply a tile to the floor,
what you're looking to have happen
is for that tile to grab,
be secure, not move,
and allow your customer
to move in right away.
So back to these other adhesives,
you're not going to want
your customer to move in
for probably five days if
you use a wet-set adhesive.
If you use this adhesive,
the new StatBond,
they can move in as you lay tile.
In fact, it will work better,
because it's pressure-sensitive,
which means you apply
weight and pressure to it
and the tiles are stuck.
So that's it for today.
What I'd really like to see
is for a little bit of
dialog from some of you.
If you have questions,
we can dig into this a little bit deeper,
but I think the overview
does a pretty good job
of explaining things.
Thank you.
