Activity Content Sections
Instructions
Relevant Terminology
Adhesion: What it’s called when one substance sticks to a different substance.
Cohesion: What it’s called when a substance sticks to itself.
Glue: A sticky substance used for holding objects together.
Peeling strength: The resistance to peeling that something like tape has from a surface. A test of peeling strength is done with adhesive applied to another surface, with the “peel” done at a 90° angle.
Tensile strength: The strength a material has to resist being pulled apart. If you glue something to the ceiling, the weight of the object tests the glue’s tensile strength.
Shear strength: The resistance to being slid from side to side. This tests the strength of the adhesive or glue when it is used to attach parallel surfaces, and then force is applied until the surfaces slide apart.


Divide participants into teams and give them the following instructions.
Conduct a peel test of the homemade and other types of glue. To conduct a peel test, cut two strips from the middle of two separate paper plates, each 2″ wide. Fold one of the strips in half. Apply the homemade glue on one half of the paper plate strip and adhere it to the other strip so it forms an L, with the unglued half sticking straight up from the flat strip. Smooth out the glued side with a rolling pin or by hand. Repeat the same test with other types of glue. Lift, or peel, each strip off to determine which is stronger (the one that is more difficult to peel off).
In order for a glue to do a good job of holding two pieces of wood together, it must have BOTH good adhesion and good cohesion.
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