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Manufacturing Technology Insights | Wednesday, January 08, 2020
There are numerous varieties of industrial coatings, each with a unique set of properties. Due to its unique qualities, each coating confers innumerable advantages on the equipment to which it is applied.
FREMONT, CA: Industrial coatings are a material applied to a variety of materials such as concrete or steel. They are chemically developed to protect against adverse environmental conditions and abrasion for industrial products such as pipes and field-erected tanks.
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Industrial Coatings are applied in an aesthetically pleasing and protective manner. Industrial coatings come in various forms, including Xylan-dry film lubricants, resins, and xylene.
Industrial coatings have a wide variety of applications and use. Coating equipment is mainly used to protect it, particularly against various sorts of corrosion. When aesthetics are a consideration, the equipment cannot be disregarded. To be more precise, industrial coatings are well-known for their primary purpose of preventing corrosion in concrete or steel. Another popular secondary application is strengthening these materials' resistance to fire or other possible hazards. Industrial coatings line the inside of water tanks and reservoirs to create a corrosive-free environment for potable water. Polymers are the most often utilized industrial coatings. Epoxy, moisture cure urethane, polyurethane, and fluoropolymer are examples of polymers employed as industrial coatings.
Industrial coating applications require a variety of factors. These include the following:
Preparation of the Substrate Surface
To ensure that the industrial coating adheres to the substrate or base material, it must be clean. Most industrial coatings rely on a mechanical or physical bond to adhere to a substrate's surface. Chemical bonding of certain compounds to the substrate surface can occasionally occur, forming an almost impenetrable layer of protection.
If the surface is not clean (i.e., dust particles, chemicals, or other impurities are present), the industrial coating will likely fail prematurely. Before beginning the coating process, the substrate's surface must be cleaned of moisture, dry pollutants, and salts using appropriate heating, blasting, and chemical cleaners. Before coating, proper surface preparation eliminates fisheyes, blistering, adhesion failure, alligatoring, bubbling, and cissing.
Selecting the Appropriate Coating System
Every industrial coating method must require priming. Priming aids in the adhesion of the coating and sealant to the substrate's surface for long-lasting performance. When substrates and coating materials are incompatible, primers enable them to operate together. Additionally, it improves the final aesthetics of the product by reducing surface defects.
Once the primer has been applied, the substrate is prepared for the coating procedure. Coating methods come in a variety of varieties. Each coating procedure is designed to coat the substrate thoroughly with the protective coating substance. The size and intricacy of the substrate affect the coating application procedure. Dip coating, brush coating, roll coating, spray coating, spin coating, and flow coating are the most frequently used industrial coating methods.
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