Coating adhesion is not only about how strongly a film sticks to a substrate; it is about how that interface behaves under load and damage. This page outlines the practical interpretation framework for adhesion evaluation.
Adhesion is more than a failure point
Adhesion is often interpreted through critical load, crack initiation, delamination mode, and damage evolution.
For that reason, coating adhesion is not a single force value but a group of observations describing interface behavior under mechanical challenge.
Scratch testing therefore connects naturally with tribology and post-test characterization.
Which data layers are read together?
| Aspect | Interpretation for Adhesion |
|---|---|
| Critical Load | Shows where damage starts or accelerates. |
| Damage Mode | Cracking, delamination, fracture, or local failure explains interface behavior. |
| Post-Test Review | The scratch track and failure zone are interpreted with microscopy or surface analysis. |
| Application Context | Adhesion only becomes meaningful when connected to the real loading condition. |
Which pages strengthen adhesion interpretation?
Scratch Tester
The scratch tester page provides direct infrastructure context for adhesion and critical-load evaluation.
Tribology Test Methods
Adhesion and surface damage are often interpreted within the broader tribology workflow.
SEM-EDS and Surface Review
The damage zone becomes much clearer when interpreted through post-test characterization.
Quick answers about coating adhesion
Why is coating adhesion important?
Adhesion determines whether a coating can preserve function under load, friction, deformation, and service exposure.
Which methods are common for coating adhesion?
Scratch testing, critical-load interpretation, and post-test surface analysis are among the most common adhesion-evaluation routes.
Is adhesion only a force value?
No. Adhesion should be interpreted through damage mode, crack evolution, interface behavior, and application context.