I have run across an interesting phenomenon and was hoping someone has done exhaustive research on it in Technet-ville.
I have a TO-3PF style package (plastic power transistor with plastic tab) that has a specific torque requirement and thread-locker material (microsphere type). When the subassembly is first assembled in a fixture to align the transistors to the heatsink and hold the nut in rotational place then torqued, they are verifiably tightened correctly. Once they sit for a day or so, they are no longer tight and the screw/nut spins in situ together. To my amateur eye, it seems the thermoplastic is exhibiting elastic deformation at this point. If re-torqued again, it stays put, which seems to possibly have crossed the threshold from elastic deformation ("bending" the atomic structure) to plastic deformation ("shearing" the atomic structure).
Is there any insight I can harvest before my 1:00 meeting today?
Ed Popielarski
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