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Release Force Over Time: Why Your First Test Doesn’t Tell the Full Story

Table of Contents

Most quality teams test release force within hours of production. If the numbers match spec, the roll is approved and shipped.

But what happens 24 hours later? Or after a week in storage? Or during overseas transport under variable humidity?

Release force isn’t static. It evolves.
And if you don’t account for time-dependent behavior, your liner might pass QA but fail in the field.
Why does release force change?
– Silicone network continues to post-cure over hours or days, especially in thermal systems
– Adhesive migrates or diffuses into the silicone layer during storage
Humidity and temperature cycling cause microstructural changes in both liner and adhesive
– Backside migration or contact pressure during winding alters the surface profile

In real-world applications, a product may sit for weeks before use. What mattered on day one becomes irrelevant by day ten.

To address this:
– Test release force immediately, after 24 hours, and after 1 week
– Simulate actual storage conditions (not just room temperature)
– Monitor residual adhesion rate to detect long-term failure risks
– Capture changes across different adhesives, not just a reference PSA

If your liner performs perfectly on day one but inconsistently later, the problem isn’t your coating. It’s your test protocol.

Release force is a curve—not a point.

How do you validate liner performance over time, not just during production?

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