When selecting the correct tile adhesive for the job in hand, the following factors should be taken into account; the size and weight of the tile, porosity of the tile and substrate, type of substrate and the ambient conditions the installation will be subjected to during its life: are the conditions wet, damp, permanently immersed or dry? Are they internal or external? is it for walls or floors? Are other variables such as under floor heating involved?
MAIN TYPES
Dispersion Adhesives
Dispersion, or ready mixed adhesives are supplied in tubs in a paste form. All dispersion adhesives cure or dry/’go off’ by evaporation, no chemical reaction or chemistry takes place during curing. For this reason dispersion adhesives are not recommended for use when using large format, impervious tiles or impervious backgrounds as the water cannot escape. Dispersion adhesives have their place, when used on walls with tiles having a surface area no greater than 900cm2 and in more or less permanently dry conditions.
Cementitious Adhesives
These are supplied in powder form to be mixed with a measured amount of water. Cement based floor and wall tiling adhesives are generally superior in performance to dispersion adhesives, they can be used either in place of ready mixed adhesives or can be used where the conditions do not permit the use of a ready mixed product. Cement cures by chemical reaction (cement hydration), not just by evaporation. Care should be taken that porous backgrounds are correctly primed in order that the water is not ‘sucked’ out of the adhesive before the cement has hydrated. Because having a route for any water to escape by evaporation is not such an issue, cement adhesives can be used with large format tiles, including very impervious (non porous) tiles such as porcelain and on impervious backgrounds. Depending on the grade or classification, cement based adhesives can be used in installations with under floor heating systems where thermal movement is likely, when tiling on plywood boarded floors where limited movement or vibration is likely, or even in permanently immersed locations such as swimming pools.
Dry-Mixed Adhesives Containing Self-Priming
This type of adhesive is extremely convenient, as you do not have to mix it or prime the wall before tiling. For walls susceptible to damp, such as in a bathroom, a water resistant adhesive should be used; otherwise standard adhesive is good enough. Usually, adhesives designed for floor tiling are water resistant. If you are tiling a concrete floor it is always best to use a non-flexible adhesive, but on wooden floors and floorboards a flexible one should be used.
Normal and rapid-set adhesives are available for both wall and floor tiling. With normal adhesives you will have to wait up to 24 hours before you can commence grouting. With rapid set the wait is reduced to only a few hours.