diepe
Mechanical
- Sep 26, 2013
- 3
Hi,
I am looking for a material that has the following properties:
[ul]
[li]Optically clear - comparable to acrylic[/li]
[li]Chemically resistant to IPA[/li]
[li]Chemically resistant to glutaraldehyde[/li]
[li]Chemically resistant to PBS (phosphate buffered saline)[/li]
[li]High enough impact strength to survive a drop of 6 ft[/li]
[/ul]
This material will be made into a tool (approximately the size of a computer mouse) that soaks in solution for about 16 hours per day. So chemical resistance to IPA and glutaraldehyde is extremely important.
Initially, polycarbonate (PC) looked like the proper material to use. But I have since found a few conflicting chemical resistance tables for PC in IPA. Per thread334-315669, polyamide (PA) looks like a good candidate as well, but I am having a hard time chemical resistance data in glutaraldehyde.
Any help or pointers to different candidate materials would be extremely helpful!
Thank you much,
Eric
I am looking for a material that has the following properties:
[ul]
[li]Optically clear - comparable to acrylic[/li]
[li]Chemically resistant to IPA[/li]
[li]Chemically resistant to glutaraldehyde[/li]
[li]Chemically resistant to PBS (phosphate buffered saline)[/li]
[li]High enough impact strength to survive a drop of 6 ft[/li]
[/ul]
This material will be made into a tool (approximately the size of a computer mouse) that soaks in solution for about 16 hours per day. So chemical resistance to IPA and glutaraldehyde is extremely important.
Initially, polycarbonate (PC) looked like the proper material to use. But I have since found a few conflicting chemical resistance tables for PC in IPA. Per thread334-315669, polyamide (PA) looks like a good candidate as well, but I am having a hard time chemical resistance data in glutaraldehyde.
Any help or pointers to different candidate materials would be extremely helpful!
Thank you much,
Eric