What is aluminium?
Aluminium is a lightweight, corrosion-resistant and easy-to-process construction material. It is used in numerous alloys that are adapted to the respective areas of application. In rubber and plastics technology, aluminium is often used as a carrier material for composite parts, e.g. for Rubber-metal compounds. The advantages are good thermal conductivity and low weight, combined with good availability.
Properties of aluminium
Aluminium has a density of approx. 2.7g/cm³ and is therefore around a third of the density of steel. It offers good corrosion resistance due to the formation of a natural oxide layer, is electrically and thermally conductive and can be easily machined, moulded and coated.
Pure aluminium only has low strength and is relatively soft. Alloying aluminium with elements such as silicon, copper, magnesium or zinc produces high-strength, resilient materials for structural and functional parts. Aluminium is easy to recycle and is therefore increasingly preferred from an ecological point of view. The modulus of elasticity of aluminium is approx. 70 GPa, the Tensile strength is 60 MPa (pure aluminium) to 540 MPa (high-strength aluminium), depending on the alloy.
Application of aluminium
Aluminium is used in almost all industries - e.g. in the:
- Automotive and aircraft construction (lightweight construction, structural parts)
- Mechanical and plant engineering (Housing, heat sinks, brackets)
- Building industry (facades, window frames, support systems)
- Composite technology (carrier material in Rubber-metal composite parts)
- Electronics (conductors, housing, heat dissipation)
In combination with elastomers such as NBR, EPDM or FKM aluminium is used as a carrier material for vibration-damping, sealing or insulating components.