Cabosil

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Cabosil.jpg

General Description

Cab-O-Sil is a fumed lightweight silica thickener used to reduce the flow of epoxies on vertical surfaces, as well as filling pinholes with its smooth texture.

Velocity Use

Cab-O-Sil is used as a thickening agent (such as in Jeffco), and it also seems to make the final filler somewhat harder when used in micro or schmooey. However, Cab-O-Sil is not a structural component and cannot be substituted for Milled Fiber or Cotton Flox.

Product Description

Cabosil is a synthetic, amorphous, untreated fumed silicon dioxide. Because of its inert nature, it has been used in food such as kethcup as well as in shampoo and some cosmetics. When mixed into liquid resin, Cabosil functions as a resin thickener (flow control agent) and sometimes as an anti-settling, anti-caking agent. Its applications are many, including thickening paint, dyes in the screen printing industry, epoxy, polyester, urethane, water, hand soap and shampoo. It is a versatile thickening agent that has even been used to "thicken" fresh water and sea water. Eager Plastics supplies quatities of Cabosil as small as 8 ounces.

Cabosil is an extremely fine particle size silica (silicon-dioxide / SiO2) aerogel. It is pure white and free-flowing. Each volume contains about 94% dead air space, with a density of only 2.3 lb/cu ft. On the other hand, water (density 62.4 lb / cu ft) weighs about 27 times more.

During the cure cycle, polyesters and epoxies being liquids tend to run off of vertical surfaces and accumulate on horizontal surfaces. The vertical surfaces become resin starved, whereas valleys become resin rich. The resin starved areas fail to achieve expected strength, and the resin rich areas suffer excessive shrinkage and warpage. Both of these undesirable conditions can be eliminated with the addition of the proper amount of cabosil. This thixotropic agent holds the liquid resin in place until the curing agent takes over and hardens it.

Normally, Cabosil is added at a 1% to 7% proportion based on the weight of the liquid (resin, hardener, thinner) involved. Because resin and Cabosil have such different densities, weight proportions are awkward. For example, one gallon of polyester weighs 9 pounds; 7% of 9 lbs is 10 ounces, which for Cabosil is about 1.25 gallons by volume. For many situations, volumetric proportions are more convenient. A gallon of resin and a gallon of Cabosil is a 50/50 ratio by volume, but only 5% by weight. Incidentally, this 50/50 volume ratio results in a resin consistency about like vaseline. Lesser amounts yield a more liquid consistency, whereas greater amounts yield thicker pastes. The exact amount used is determined by the application. The addition of Cabosil has no effect on such properties as pot life, cure time , etc., and only affects strength to the degree that entrapped air reduced cross-sectional area.

For preciseness, a distinction has to be made between thickness and thixotropic. These terms are not the same. Thixotropic fluids are not always thick. They are only thick when they are left undisturbed. When they are being mixed or brushed, they appear to be fluid, but when left undisturbed for 20 to 30 seconds, they become thicker and stop flowing. This is how it is possible to have a liquid that is easy to brush, but will not run.

In order to get the maximum effect with the least amount of Cabosil (EP7965) the microscopic particles must be homogeneously dispersed throughout the resin. For best results, use a high shear mixing blade running at maximum speed. The effect can be increased even more using Cabosil activator, EP7708. If a mixing stick must be used, expect to consume more of the agent. Whenever thixotrophy is needed, no finer, more effective product exists than Eager Plastics’ Cab-o-sil.

Packaging Weights

This epoxy is available at Aircraft Spruce in 1 and 10 lbs bags.

Properties

Weight per Gallon: Approximately 8 oz.
pH (4% aqueous slurry): 3.7 - 4.3
B.E.T. Surface Area: 200 m2 / g
325 mesh (44 microns) residue: 0.02% max
Bulk Density: 3.0 lb / cu ft (max)
Pour Density: 50 g/l Tap Density
Loss on Heating: <1.5% max
Loss on Ignition (@1000C): <2 wt%
Refractive Index: 1.46
X-ray form: Amorphous
Assay (Percent Silicon Dioxide): >99.8%
Oil Adsorption: 350 g / 100 g oil
Average Particle (Aggregate) Size: 0.2-0.3 microns

Directions for Use

Mix in with the target epoxy to the desired thickness (often to "cake icing" thickness).

Safety and Handling

Here are the MSDS sheets for both the resin and the hardener.
MSDS