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Letter 1045
Coating ID of capillary tubes with
polysiloxane / silicone
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We are attempting to coat the inside of brass and stainless steel
capillary tubes (approximately 250 Microns I.D.) with a polysiloxane
(silicone) coating. We are having difficulty getting a uniform
coating and am looking for a procedure to produce same without
defects. We currently do not use and pretreatment or passivation of
the metals (brass and stainless) and have been attempting to coat by
drawing a dilute 3% solids polysiloxane coating through the tubes
under vacuum and exhausting the residual solvents to complete the
coating/curing process.
Can you recommend a process for cleaning and passivating the
surfaces of the brass and stainless that would give satisfactory
results with subsequent coating. Capillary tubes are for gas
chromatography column use.
Any assistance would be appreciated.
Dave Reim
- Columbus, Ohio
.
Not all polysilaxanes are currently being marketed. The ones that
are not must typically be licensed from a patent holder. On the web
you can find abstracts of many of these patents and can contact the
patent holder after getting the phone number of the patent holder
from the Patent & Trademark Office. Currently I am looking at one
particular polysilaxane for our project that has a clear optical
finish (our requirement) but requires no fillers, thus the chemical
has a higher modulus, goes on differently, and is even harder than
others once cured. I am not a chemist, but it could be that fillers
are interfering with adhesion in your application.
Christina Duncan
- Dallas, Texas
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