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Q&A PVA glue curing process

What happens when PVA glue sets? I am curious about the white PVA glue that is commonly used for bonding wood and paper. Although an Internet search find lots of articles they mostly seem to be ne...

2 answers  ·  posted 1y ago by chris-barry‭  ·  last activity 8mo ago by Mithical‭

Question materials
#4: Post edited by user avatar Olin Lathrop‭ · 2022-10-05T14:57:20Z (over 1 year ago)
Removed annoying distraction about why post shouldn't be closed.
PVA glue curing process
  • What happens when PVA glue sets?
  • I am curious about the white PVA glue that is commonly used for bonding wood and paper. Although an Internet search find lots of articles they mostly seem to be near copies of one another and not even the Wikipedia article say much about the curing process.
  • As far as I could discover, the glue is an emulsion of the PVA polymer in water which sets as the water is drawn away into the materials being bonded, and ultimately evaporates, however, if there is no chemical change in the PVA then I would expect that this would be reversed by supplying enough water.
  • If it does change chemically then is there something in the environment that promotes the change?
  • Also, does the glue ever bond chemically to the materials being joined? If so then what types of material will it bond to, and if not then, presumably, it will only give a good bond between porous materials.
  • To anticipate complaints that this question is wildly off topic:
  • 1. I am speculating about ways I might use a material, and asking for scientific guidance.
  • 2. This topic looked like a place likely to attract people with relevant knowledge.
  • 3. There is so little traffic here that perhaps the site would benefit if the remit was widened to include general questions of a scientific or technological nature.
  • What happens when PVA glue sets?
  • I am curious about the white PVA glue that is commonly used for bonding wood and paper. Although an Internet search find lots of articles they mostly seem to be near copies of one another and not even the Wikipedia article say much about the curing process.
  • As far as I could discover, the glue is an emulsion of the PVA polymer in water which sets as the water is drawn away into the materials being bonded, and ultimately evaporates, however, if there is no chemical change in the PVA then I would expect that this would be reversed by supplying enough water.
  • If it does change chemically then is there something in the environment that promotes the change?
  • Also, does the glue ever bond chemically to the materials being joined? If so then what types of material will it bond to, and if not then, presumably, it will only give a good bond between porous materials.
#3: Post edited by user avatar chris-barry‭ · 2022-09-28T15:09:00Z (over 1 year ago)
  • What happens when PVA glue sets?
  • I am curious about the white PVA glue that is commonly used for bonding wood and paper. Although an Internet search find lots of articles they mostly seem to be near copies of one another and not even the Wikipedia article say much about the curing process.
  • As far as I could discover, the glue is an emulsion of the PVA polymer in water which sets as the water is drawn away into the materials being bonded, and ultimately evaporates, however, if there is no chemical change in the PVA then I would expect that this would be reversed by supplying enough water.
  • If it does change chemically then is there something in the environment that promotes the change?
  • Also, does the glue ever bond chemically to the materials being joined? If so then what types of material will it bond to, and if not then, presumably, it will only give a good bond between porous materials.
  • What happens when PVA glue sets?
  • I am curious about the white PVA glue that is commonly used for bonding wood and paper. Although an Internet search find lots of articles they mostly seem to be near copies of one another and not even the Wikipedia article say much about the curing process.
  • As far as I could discover, the glue is an emulsion of the PVA polymer in water which sets as the water is drawn away into the materials being bonded, and ultimately evaporates, however, if there is no chemical change in the PVA then I would expect that this would be reversed by supplying enough water.
  • If it does change chemically then is there something in the environment that promotes the change?
  • Also, does the glue ever bond chemically to the materials being joined? If so then what types of material will it bond to, and if not then, presumably, it will only give a good bond between porous materials.
  • To anticipate complaints that this question is wildly off topic:
  • 1. I am speculating about ways I might use a material, and asking for scientific guidance.
  • 2. This topic looked like a place likely to attract people with relevant knowledge.
  • 3. There is so little traffic here that perhaps the site would benefit if the remit was widened to include general questions of a scientific or technological nature.
#2: Post edited by user avatar chris-barry‭ · 2022-09-28T13:35:35Z (over 1 year ago)
  • What happens when PVA glue sets?
  • I am curious about the white PVA glue that is commonly used for bonding wood and paper. Although an Internet search find lots of articles they mostly seem to be near copies of on another and not even the Wikipedia article say much about the curing process.
  • As far as I could discover, the glue is an emulsion of the PVA polymer in water which sets as the water is drawn away into the materials being bonded, and ultimately evaporates, however, if there is no chemical change in the PVA then I would expect that this would be reversed by supplying enough water.
  • If it does change chemically then is there something in the environment that promotes the change?
  • Also, does the glue ever bond chemically to the materials being joined? If so then what types of material will it bond to, and if not then, presumably, it will only give a good bond between porous materials.
  • What happens when PVA glue sets?
  • I am curious about the white PVA glue that is commonly used for bonding wood and paper. Although an Internet search find lots of articles they mostly seem to be near copies of one another and not even the Wikipedia article say much about the curing process.
  • As far as I could discover, the glue is an emulsion of the PVA polymer in water which sets as the water is drawn away into the materials being bonded, and ultimately evaporates, however, if there is no chemical change in the PVA then I would expect that this would be reversed by supplying enough water.
  • If it does change chemically then is there something in the environment that promotes the change?
  • Also, does the glue ever bond chemically to the materials being joined? If so then what types of material will it bond to, and if not then, presumably, it will only give a good bond between porous materials.
#1: Initial revision by user avatar chris-barry‭ · 2022-09-28T13:34:26Z (over 1 year ago)
PVA glue curing process
What happens when PVA glue sets?
I am curious about the white PVA glue that is commonly used for bonding wood and paper. Although an Internet search find lots of articles they mostly seem to be near copies of on another and not even the Wikipedia article say much about the curing process.

As far as I could discover, the glue is an emulsion of the PVA polymer in water which sets as the water is drawn away into the materials being bonded, and ultimately evaporates, however, if there is no chemical change in the PVA then I would expect that this would be reversed by supplying enough water.

If it does change chemically then is there something in the environment that promotes the change?

Also, does the glue ever bond chemically to the materials being joined? If so then what types of material will it bond to, and if not then, presumably, it will only give a good bond between porous materials.