A binder or binding agent is any material or substance that holds or draws other materials together to form a cohesive whole mechanically, chemically, by
adhesion or
cohesion.
In a more narrow sense, binders are liquid or dough-like substances that harden by a chemical or physical process and bind fibres, filler powder and other particles added into it. Examples include
glue,
adhesive and
thickening.
Examples of mechanical binders are
bond stones in masonry and
tie beams in timber framing.
Classification
Binders are loosely classified as organic (
bitums, animal and plant
glues,
polymers) and inorganic (
lime,
cement,
gypsum, liquid
glass, etc.). These can be either metallic or ceramic as well as polymeric depending on the nature of the main material. For example, in the compound WC-Co (Tungsten Carbide used in cutting tools) Co constitutes the binding agent for the WC particles.
Based on their chemical resistance, binders are classified by the field of use: non-hydraulic (
gypsum, air-cements,
magnesia,
hydrated lime), hydraulic (
Roman cement,
portland cement,
hydraulic lime), acid-resistant (
silicon fluoride cement,
quartz cement), and
autoclavable (harden at 170 to 300°С i.e. 8-16 atm pressure and, e.g., comprise
CaSiO3 materials).
Physical properties
Some materials labeled as binders such as
cement have a high
compressive strength but low
tensile strength and need to be reinforced with fibrous material or
rebar if
tension and
shear forces will be applied.
Other binding agents such as
resins may be tough and possibly elastic but can neither bear
compressive nor tensile force. Tensile strength is greatly improved in
composite materials consisting of resin as the
matrix and
fiber as a reinforcement. Compressive strength can be improved by adding
filling material.
Uses
Binders hold together pigments and sometimes filling material to form
paints,
pastels, and other materials used for artistic and utilitarian painting. Materials include
wax,
linseed oil,
natural gums such as
gum arabic or
gum tragacanth,
methyl cellulose, or
proteins such as
egg white or
casein. Glue is traditionally made by the boiling of hoofs, bones, or skin of animals and then mixing the hard gelatinous residue with water. Natural gum-based binders are made from substances extracted from plants. Larger amounts of dry substance are added to liquid binders in order to cast or model
sculptures and
reliefs.
In
cooking, various edible thickening agents are used as binders. Some of them, e.g.
tapioca flour,
lactose,
sucrose, microcrystalline
cellulose,
polyvinylpyrrolidone and various
starches are also used in pharmacology in making
tablets.
Tablet binders include
lactose powder,
sucrose powder,
tapioca starch (cassava flour) and microcrystalline
cellulose.
In
building construction,
concrete uses
cement as a binder.
Asphalt pavement uses
bitumen binder. Traditionally straw and natural fibres are used to strengthen
clay in
wattle-and-daub construction and in the
building material cob which would otherwise become brittle after drying. Sand is added to improve compressive strength, hardness and reduce shrinkage. The binding property of clay is also used widely to prepare shaped articles (e.g. pots and vases) or to bind solid pieces (e.g. bricks).
In
composite materials,
epoxy,
polyester or
phenolic resins are common. In
reinforced carbon–carbon,
plastic or
pitch resin is used as a source of carbon released through
pyrolysis.
Transite,
hypertufa,
papercrete and
petecrete used
cement as a binder.
In
explosives,
wax or polymers like
polyisobutylene or
styrene-butadiene rubber are often used as binders for
plastic explosives. For
polymer-bonded explosives, various synthetic
polymers are used.
In
rocket fuels,
polybutadiene acrylonitrile copolymer was used in 1960-70's big solid-fuel booster
rocket fuels.
Organic binders, designed to disintegrate by heat during
baking, are used in
sintering.
History
In the
Classical World painters used materials like egg, wax, honey,
lime,
casein,
linseed oil or
bitumen as binders to mix with
pigment in order to hold the pigment particles together in the formation of paint. Egg-based
tempera was especially popular in Europe from the
Middle Ages until the early 16th century. However, since that time, the binder of choice for paint has been
oil.
See also
*
Binder (disambiguation)
References
{{Authority control
Category:Visual arts materials
Category:Adhesives
Category:Sculpture
Category:Painting