Why Tile Adhesives Hav
Introduction For many years, sand–cement mortar was the default method for fixing tiles. It worked reasonably well with thick ceramic tiles, rough concrete substrates, and site conditions where precision was not critical. But construction materials have evolved. Tile technology has changed—and installation methods must evolve with it. Today, using cement to fix tiles is no longer a “traditional option.” It is a technical compromise that increasingly leads to site failures. 1. Modern tiles are engineered differently Most tiles used today—porcelain, vitrified, and large-format tiles—are manufactured with very low water absorption, often below 0.5% . Sand–cement mortar relies on: Absorption of water into the tile Mechanical interlocking during cement hydration Porcelain tiles simply do not absorb enough water for this process to occur effectively. What this looks like on site Tiles sound hollow within weeks Adhesion appears fine initially Tiles start loosening or popping month...