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Was Epoxy Used Appropriate for Loads

July 10, 2007

As the hearing continues the focus is on the type of epoxy used in the ceiling panels that collapsed in the Big Dig tunnel last summer. 

Following a presentation outlining the fundamentals of epoxy. The conversation has now turned to the difference between "fast set" epoxies and standard epoxy. The epoxy used in the tunnel in question was a fast set epoxy. And the question now is whether in effect the wrong "glue" was used and was this information availalbe to the designers, project managers and suppliers. It’s a question of the load values in terms of the type of epoxy used, along with the long-term characteristics of fast set epoxy and the safety value factor of this type of adhesive in this type of structure. Was the epoxy used appropriate for the loads it was expected to hold?

Posted by Elizabeth Taurasi on July 10, 2007 | Comments (1)

July 11, 2007
In response to: Was Epoxy Used Appropriate for Loads
Undetermined commented:

If production was rushed there are many things that could go wrong with the epoxy. It would be interesting to find out which crews installed which parts, using which lot numbers of epoxy precursors, along with when the epoxy resins were processed. Perhaps more care was taken with the processes in the big tunnels than the less important ones-- or perhaps different teams of workers followed directions better than others and worked on different tunnels. Perhaps the care measuring the epoxy hardener and resin were not so exacting, or the materials were tainted with moisture or the handling techniques for the resin and hardener could have allowed for some premature interaction within a storage vessel curing. Tricks to speed up or slow down the polymer reactions could also have sacrificed the integrity of the resulting material. Dissimilar coefficient of expansion (metal bolt versus epoxy) could have applied extra forces that took advantage of the material’s nature to creep. Now we come to the expected operating temperature range… Under ground and under water, the major tunnels might have more stable temperature ranges than an entrance ramp that faces the sun in July – note that the picture posted in the DN article shows sunlight streaming in the entrance. I am suggesting that due to being well above the Glass Transition Temperature of the epoxy, there was more creep (and it happened faster) than was expected. This is could be reminiscent of the Space Shuttle O-ring disaster. On another note I wonder why a lighter fire-proof material was not used instead of concrete. These slabs I thought were basically making a return duct for vehicle exhaust gasses.

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