What Causes UV Adhesive to Cure Only at the Surface?
Surface-only cure in UV adhesives — a hard, tack-free skin over a liquid or soft interior — is one of the most deceptive failures in UV bonding. The assembly appears cured from the outside. Handling feels normal. But the bond line is structurally compromised, with uncured adhesive that can flow, delaminate, or fail catastrophically under load. Identifying what causes surface-only cure is the first step toward eliminating it. Why UV Adhesive Cures from the Surface Inward UV cure initiates where UV photons are absorbed. In an open-surface application, the maximum UV intensity is at the top surface — UV delivered from the lamp strikes the surface first, and only attenuated UV penetrates deeper. Polymerization initiates and progresses fastest at the surface. As the surface layer cures and hardens, it can prevent further oxygen access to the surface, eliminating the oxygen inhibition that kept the surface liquid. Meanwhile, the adhesive interior may still be receiving insufficient UV to initiate complete cure. The result: a cured skin with liquid or gelled interior. Surface-only cure is not always a failure — for tack cure applications where a quick surface fix is all that is needed before a secondary cure step, it is intentional. But for structural bonds requiring complete through-cure, surface-only cure is a defect. Beer-Lambert Absorption: The Physical Limit The fundamental physics governing cure depth is the Beer-Lambert law: UV intensity decreases exponentially with depth in the adhesive. The rate of this decrease — how rapidly irradiance falls as depth increases — depends on the adhesive's UV absorptivity at the cure wavelength. For a thick bond line (>1 mm), a highly filled or pigmented adhesive, or any adhesive with high UV absorptivity at the cure wavelength, irradiance at the adhesive interior may be below the minimum required for polymerization even when the surface receives ample UV. The surface cures; the interior cannot. Confirming Beer-Lambert limitation: Apply the adhesive to a glass slide in progressively increasing thicknesses (0.5 mm, 1 mm, 2 mm, 3 mm). Cure each with the production process. Probe each to identify at what thickness cure depth no longer reaches the bottom of the adhesive layer. This establishes the practical cure depth limit for this adhesive and process. Overly High Irradiance: Surface-Locking the Skin At very high irradiance, the surface cures extremely rapidly — within fractions of a second — forming a rigid skin before UV has had sufficient time to penetrate and initiate polymerization throughout the adhesive depth. The surface skin acts as a barrier that prevents the interior from being further exposed to diffused UV and prevents outgassing of any generated byproducts. This failure mode is distinguished from Beer-Lambert limitation because it occurs even in relatively thin adhesive layers when irradiance is very high, and the surface skin is harder than normally cured material (overcured) while the interior is uncured. Fix: Reduce irradiance and extend exposure time to achieve the same total dose more slowly. Lower irradiance allows UV to penetrate and initiate polymerization throughout the adhesive depth…