Hicksville, N.Y.—As times and flooring products change, so do the glues that
hold them in place. FCNews spoke with sever al top adhesive executives on what’s
new in glue and with their companies, including new technology and applications.
“We’ve expanded the technology we started a number of years ago,” said Jim
Daubs, director of business development for Taylor Adhesives, “which were the
cross-linking resin adhesives. We have expanded them into all product categories
of floor covering, not just wood floors where they started. We now have them
available for vinyl floors—sheet and tile—carpet and linoleum.
Our Medatec products are specific for each of the flooring categories. “When
that cross-link technology cures it forms a fully waterproof bond,” he
explained. “We have added that to a series of sealers for concrete slabs that
have high-moisture problems. Just recently we introduced a hybrid sealer which
is much faster, has a higher threshold for moisture, is a lot less costly than
anything we’ve done in the past and is compatible with all flooring types.”
Robert McNamara, marketing manager for Bostik, said, on the carpet and vinyl
side, the driving force seems to be adhesives that are green and lower VOCs.
“That’s really the dominant thing going on there. I believe many installers
don’t really realize that they may be buying a product that is may be five or
six up to nine or 10 years old. That really isn’t the same product they started
buying 10 years ago because as the regulations go down with acceptable VOC
levels, the manufacturers have to stay ahead of the curve.
“On the hardwood side,” he added, “the more secure urethanes are still the
cat’s meow, so to speak. One of the hot topics right now is the use of moisture
barriers as the first step for the wood floors. We are developing one as well.
People are definitely buying the product and demanding it. We will be offering
one we believe is pretty unique. With hardwood flooring, of course, the less
moisture coming from the slab the better.” For Wood Only Myrna Block, executive
vice president of DriTac, which deals solely with wood floors, noted the trend
toward bamboo and darker, more exotic woods. “That requires urethane. A few
years ago we added VOC-compliant urethane to our product line. Sometimes goods
imported may not have the best quality control. So we’ve gone into the urethane
marketplace.
“One of the newer things people want to do is called wet lay adhesive,” she
explained, “which has very little water in it. It is installed only as far as
the installer’s arm can reach. They will trowel and lay into it while it is wet.
In addition to our staple product, DriTac 6200, we now have Dri-Tac 9200, which
is a wet-laying product. We cover all the bases.” Ted Egan, president of
ParaChem, noted, because of the types of adhesives companies produce, many are
segmented into working with certain mills. “Also, many of the mills, because of
the demand for that one particular glue, will only warrant their private-label
adhesive for their goods. For an adhesive company like us, we offer a general
warranty and provide a letter superceding that of the mill if someone wants to
use our product.”
“Another big issue is that of mold, mildew and bacteria,” he added, “so
companies are including anti-microbial agents in their products. For example, we
have the exclusive distribution rights for Microban in North America. And
Microban is the most recognized EPA-regulated anti-microbial used to fight mold,
bacteria and mildew in the country. We put this in all our products which makes
them very safe. “Of course, another critical issue is the amount of VOCs in your
adhesives,” Egan explained. “With all the EPA-regulated, country, district,
city, state standards, they’re all different. They all have different demands of
how many VOCs you can have in the atmosphere, with California probably being the
toughest. “That’s why, in California,” he added “you don’t see many
manufacturers of adhesive, because the state has pretty much driven everybody
that has any kind of an emission out of the state. That’s why many are in China
and India, not necessarily because of the jobs but because of the difficulty in
complying with the rules in the U.S.”
Commercial Spray Application methods have changed, he noted, as now one can
spray an adhesive onto the subfloor. “There are some spray systems now where you
can literally spray the floor and put down VCT tile or double-stick applications
for carpet. It gets the mechanic off his feet. “They’ll spray the floor, put the
pad down, then they spray the pad and put the carpet over it. With carpet and
VCT tiles for schools, you can just spray the floor and set the tiles in. You
can do it four or five times as fast as normal so you save a lot on labor while
also saving your knees.” “We’ve had to keep up with the advances in the flooring
itself, no doubt,” said Daubs.
“Some new sealers we’ve developed for some of our manufacturing clients are
interesting. For instance, there are more rigid standards for some of the vinyl
backed carpet tile and six-foot products where they have come to us and
developed seam sealers that would withstand certain tests that they didn’t
before. “And, at the same time, be solvent-free so they can be used in certain
states,” he explained. “So we have had to stay ahead of the curve by working
with the manufacturers. And not just in carpet backings but virtually
everything. The problems associated with luxury vinyl tile are not easy to deal
with either.” Daubs noted, Taylor’s Medatec product is a series of the
resin-based cross-linking adhesives.
“These are the newest class of adhesives, replacing epoxies and urethanes.
They are much better than the latex-based adhesives. The response from
installers has been overwhelming. We’re getting new customers everyday. “The
thing that is kind of interesting about it is,” he concluded, “now we are having
specifiers come to us on how to specify our system into their construction
requirements. We’ve had that happen with end users as well as big architectural
firms particularly those involved with sensitive healthcare areas.” —Louis
Iannaco