Moisture & metallizing
Does moisture affect the metallization of Aluminium?
We laminate Metalized polyester with PEG coated paper and metal peel off. Once the oxidation starts in metallization will it destroy the whole metal with passage of time or not?
Will metalized MPET will be oxidised if we laminate it with PEG coated Paper. The ratio of PEG coated paper is 80% PEG and 20% water. We observe white spots in metalized paper. Please try to find root cause and suggest us what measures can safe us.
ANSWER
Yes moisture can affect the performance of aluminium metallized films. This starts with the film before metallization. Most polymers contain moisture as well as the water in the air that is trapped between layers as it is wound into a roll. This is all carried into the vacuum system. Even when the system is pumped out to a low base pressure there will still be enough oxygen and water in the system that a monolayer of oxygen can form on a surface in less than 1 second. Thus all aluminium metallized films have a proportion of oxide in them, usually of the order 1% - 2%. If the vacuum
system has a leak this can be somewhat worse.
The aluminium is a metal that forms an oxide on the surface that acts as a good barrier layer and prevents further rapid oxidation.
The adhesion of the aluminium to the polymer web is dependent on a number of things. This can include the polymer quality, contamination, the storage conditions (humidity and temperature), any surface treatment, the type of treatment, the age of any treatment as well as the process conditions such as deposition pressure. When laminating another layer to the surface it will depend on the relative adhesion strengths and the residual stress following the lamination. If the residual stress is large the adhesion of the aluminium needs to be higher than if the residual stress is low.
The speed of oxidation and amount of oxidation depends on the thickness of the aluminium layer. If the aluminium is very thin and the adhesion is poor the there will be very little aluminium left once the surface has been oxidised. If the aluminium is thicker then even after the surface oxidation there will be sufficient metal left to give a long lifetime for the rest of the aluminium.


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