How to choose the appropriate adhesive material

The selection of adhesive materials is usually closely related to the final labeling and usage scenarios, such as the speed of labeling, whether the application scenario is humid, whether the object being labeled is soft, whether there are requirements for repeated labeling, and whether there are requirements for coverage. Different manufacturers have different requirements for selecting materials.

From the scenario where the object being pasted is prone to deformation, such as a daily chemical bucket, the principle of "sticking together those who are similar" is usually followed, that is, the same surface material adhesive is selected based on the material of the back sticker. The same material allows the label and backing to have the same ductility, stretchability, and temperature resistance, and to undergo the same changes in the same environment.

If the PE surface material is attached to the PE bucket, when the ambient temperature rises, the bottle will expand and the label will also change with the change of the bottle body. If other material labels are selected, they cannot wrinkle or curl with the change of the bottle body, which will affect the appearance.

Poor adhesive adhesion leads to label lifting

Some self-adhesive materials lose their stickiness quickly after leaving the factory for a period of time, and coupled with the fact that the finished self-adhesive labels may not be used by end users immediately after leaving the factory, the phenomenon of label warping may occur during labeling. The lifting of labels caused by this reason is usually manifested as problems with labels processed from new materials, while labels processed from old materials may have problems, or inventory labels may have problems, and there is a significant difference in the viscosity of the new and old label materials. The lifting of labels caused by this reason usually starts within a few hours after labeling, and the longer the time, the more severe it becomes. When encountering such problems, you can file a complaint and claim compensation with the raw material supplier, and request the replacement of qualified materials.

Composition and Application of Adhesive Material Manufacturing Process

The basic structure of self-adhesive label materials consists of three parts: surface material, adhesive, and base paper. However, from the perspective of manufacturing process and complete structure, self-adhesive materials are composed of seven parts:

1. Surface coating: Used to change the surface characteristics of surface materials, such as improving surface tension, changing color, adding protective layers, etc., to make them better accept ink and easier to print, achieving the purpose of anti fouling, increasing ink adhesion, and preventing printed images and text from falling off. Surface coating is mainly used for non absorbent materials, such as aluminum foil, aluminum coated paper, and various film materials

2. Surface material: refers to the material that receives printed graphics and text on the front and M adhesive on the back, and is ultimately applied to the object to be pasted. The type of surface material is determined by the final application and printing processing technology< br />  < br /> 3. Bottom coat: also known as adhesive coating, can make the adhesive and surface material bond more tightly. Primer also has the function of preventing chemical reagents from penetrating, otherwise chemical reagents may penetrate from the bottom three layers and dirty the surface of the label. In addition, colored primers can also be used as backgrounds for transparent surface materials< br />  < br /> 4. Adhesive: Adhesive ensures moderate adhesion between the base paper and the surface paper, and also ensures good adhesion with the adhesive after the surface paper is peeled off. There are many types of adhesives, and different formulas can be selected according to different surface materials, substrates, and usage scenarios. Adhesive has a direct impact on the performance of adhesive materials and is one of the main performance indicators for measuring adhesive printing materials  < br /> 5. Silicon oil layer: It refers to coating a silicon oil layer on the surface of the base paper. Coating a silicon oil layer can make the base paper a very low surface tension and smooth surface. Its function is to prevent the adhesive from sticking to the base paper, ensuring that the label and the base paper are easily separated

6. Base paper: also known as release paper or peel off paper, the function of the base paper is to receive release agent coating, protect barcode labels from being contaminated before use, and provide support to ensure that the labels will not bend or curl during the label processing, such as die-cutting, waste disposal, and labeling on the labeling machine. Base paper can be divided into paper base paper and film base paper. According to different processing techniques, paper base paper can be divided into over level calendering base paper, machine processed calendering base paper, and surface coated base paper< br />  < br /> 7. Back coating or back printing: Back coating is a protective coating on the back of the base paper to prevent the adhesive around the label from sticking to the base paper after waste disposal or rewinding. Another function is to manufacture multi-layer labels. Back printing is to print the registered trademark or pattern of the manufacturer on the back of the base paper, playing a role in publicity and anti-counterfeiting