First...in this case its not just strength that matters. But let's touch on strength from an engineering perspective and similar ratings.
Strength would most commonly be discussed in terms of tensile (ultimate and yield), shear and for non "even" materials...compressive. As I've already said. A weak steel has a yield strength of 33KSI, while a strong adhesive is only 5KSI. And that doesnt take into account that this strength is directionally dependent. The ultimate strength of steel is going to be at least 10 times greater than the epoxy.
Now just as important (if not more so) is the other properties that are massively different. Elongation, fracture toughness, impact strength...etc. now remembered crash structures are designed to deform in a very specific way. The yield strength determines when that deformation starts...but elongation and toughness play the bigger role in defining how "far it can stretch" and how much energy it can absorb without catastrophic failure. Adhesives don't even come close to metals in that category.
Strength would most commonly be discussed in terms of tensile (ultimate and yield), shear and for non "even" materials...compressive. As I've already said. A weak steel has a yield strength of 33KSI, while a strong adhesive is only 5KSI. And that doesnt take into account that this strength is directionally dependent. The ultimate strength of steel is going to be at least 10 times greater than the epoxy.
Now just as important (if not more so) is the other properties that are massively different. Elongation, fracture toughness, impact strength...etc. now remembered crash structures are designed to deform in a very specific way. The yield strength determines when that deformation starts...but elongation and toughness play the bigger role in defining how "far it can stretch" and how much energy it can absorb without catastrophic failure. Adhesives don't even come close to metals in that category.
Comment