Deaerators: Technical Background
Deaerators: Technical Background
Deaerators: Technical Background
Deaerators
TEGO Airex
Foam is a major
problem
Figure 1:
Waterborne wood
coating, airless applied
Foam is one of the most common problems which a formulator must consider
when developing coatings, paints and
printing inks. Foam is particularly important in waterborne, radiation-curing,
solvent-free or high solids formulations.
The problem of foam is usually easy to
recognize, as when foam bubbles form
in a container after filling. Foam is also
clearly visible when applying a paint to
a substrate by brush or by roller. There
are however numerous other problems
where the connection with foam is not
immediately obvious.
without defoamer
with defoamer
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What is foam?
Surfactants cause foam
Foam is a stable distribution of small gas
bubbles (usually air bubbles) in a liquid
system. Pure liquids do not foam. Only if
surfactants are present in the liquid can
a stable foam occur.
Figure 2:
Surfactants orient
themselves at the
interface liquid/air
v ~ r 2/
v = rising speed of the foam bubble
r = radius of the foam bubble
= viscosity of the paint
This means that air bubbles in paint
formulations with a relatively high viscosity only rise very slowly (small rising speed v). As a consequence air bubbles do not reach the paint surface but
remain in the paint layer while the paint
cures further or dries physically a
great problem particularly in highly viscous floor coatings or high-build wood
varnishes.
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How is micro-foam
formed?
Micro-foam consists of small air or gas
bubbles in the coating. When present,
surfactants orient themselves at the air/
liquid interface and surround the microbubbles.
Figure 3: Rising speed depends on viscosity of the paint and size of the bubble
Micro-bubbles can often only be recognized with visual aids such as a magnifying glass or a microscope. However, for
micro-bubbles to occur, air or gas must
first have been incorporated into the
paint formulation.
Air incorporation can occur by:
stirring during paint manufacture
stirring when adding curing agent in
2-pack systems
application processes such as rolling,
dipping, spraying and, most importantly, airless-/airmix-spraying
release of gas by chemical processes
during curing of the paint (e.g. reactions of isocyanate with moisture)
application on porous substrates such
as wood, stone or cement floors
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The air from the small micro-bubbles either remains dissolved or diffuses into
larger micro-bubbles whose internal
pressure is markedly lower. Larger micro-bubbles can thus grow further.
Laplace Presure:
Derived from the Young-Laplace
equation with Pin = Pex + 2 /r.
Pin = internal pressure of
air-bubble
Pex = external pressure of liquid
surrounding the bubble
= interfacial tension
r
= radius of the air-bubble
Figure 5: View through a microscope: dissolving of micro-bubbles with time proceeding, waterborne formulation on glass, airless applied
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There is a wide range of chemical compounds which can show targeted incompatibility in coatings systems, e.g.:
organic polymers such as polyethers
or polyacrylates
dimethylpolysiloxanes (silicone oils)
organically modified polysiloxanes
such as arylalkyl modified polysiloxanes
fluorosilicones
Figure 6:
Young-Laplace
equation
How do deaerators
work?
Effective deaerators must have a targeted incompatibility with the paint
formulation so that the deaerator immediately orients itself at the air/liquid
interface, i.e. at the micro-bubbles. It is
assumed that the deaerator displaces
foam stabilizing surfactants there and
so promotes diffusion of the air into the
surrounding medium. The micro-bubbles
become ever smaller until they completely dissolve.
b)
c)
d)
Figure 7: Solventborne clear coat, with different additions of deaerator: a) compatible; b) + c) incompatible;
d) targeted incompatible
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Is there an ideal
deaerator?
The ideal deaerator is both effective and
sufficiently compatible with the paint,
coating or printing ink formulation.
Both effectiveness and compatibility
must be tested for each particular coating system. Effectiveness and compatibility are not only dependent on the
deaerator itself but also on the quantity
used in the formulation. The deaerator
most suitable and its optimal concentration should be determined in preliminary investigations as well as in tests
made under practical conditions.
Combinations of additives are helpful
Highly efficient deaerators may unfortunately produce surface defects such
as craters. This can be avoided by combining them with substrate wetting or
surface active additives (see Technical
Background Slip, Flow and Radiation
curing Additives, p. 60, and Substrate
Wetting Additives, p. 68).
Storage stability tests are necessary
High storage stability is expected from
many coatings systems. The ideal deaerator should therefore be effective and
compatible even after extended storage.
Tests under demanded conditions are
essential (e.g. four weeks at room temperature, 40 C and 4 C). In many cases
a combination of several deaerators or a
deaerator and defoamer is the best
choice.
Degussa supplies deaerators from the
Tego product range for numerous applications thus enabling micro-foam and
general foam problems to be effectively
combated in waterborne, solventborne,
a)
b)
Figure 8:
Test foils from the
flowout test
a) without additves,
b) with deaerator
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dewetting and the foam bubble can rupture (see also Technical Background
Defoamers, p. 44)
How important is the method of application when choosing the deaerator?
The method by which the coating is applied plays a very important role. There
are deaerators which, because of their
strong incompatibility produce, for example, a break of curtain at the curtain
coater machine. In this case only relatively compatible deaerators should be
used.
FAQ:
At what stage in a coatings formulation
should the deaerator be added?
Deaerators can be added to the millbase or the let-down. This depends primarily on the incompatibility of the
deaerator with the coating system. It is
generally true the greater the incompatibility the more shear force is required.
Some deaerators are excellent as millbase deaerators while others can be
used in the let-down or in clear coats.
For the ideal point of addition, please
see the technical data sheets of the
products.
Can deaerators also act as defoamers?
Basically yes. Both deaerators and defoamers work on the principle of targeted incompatibility. If macro-bubbles
form, e.g. in low viscosity formulations,
deaerators will also orient themselves at
this liquid/air boundary. The targeted incompatibility of the deaerator leads to