Coating S
Coating S
References:
1. Corrosion and Corrosion protection
handbook by A. Schweitzer
2. Corrosion Prevention by Protective
Coatings by C.G. Munger (NACE)
3. Corrosion Control by S.A. Bradford
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Coatings and Lining
The most widely used method for corrosion control
6.7 Billion dollar in 1997 for corrosion protection by
coatings
A coat is a thin protective layer, typically 50-100 m.
A lining is thick, typically 0.5-3 mm in thickness.
Linings are usually applied in the interiors of
tanks, pipes, vessels, where immersion is
continuous and corrosion is severe.
Coatings are usually applied on surfaces where
immersion is not continuous such as the external
surfaces of tanks and pipes.
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Coatings and Lining
Corrosion protection by coatings can be achieved by one of the following
mechanisms:
1. A barrier coating that prevents the corrosive environment from
reaching the base metal (thick lining).
2. A sacrificial metal coating that corrodes while giving cathodic
protection to the base metal (galvanizing).
3. A noble metal coating that ensures that the base metal is in the passive
state.
4. An inhibitor coating that slows electrode reactions.
5. An electrically resistive coating that slows down electrochemical
corrosion reactions (organic coating).
Coating
or lining
Base metal
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Coating Materials
Coatings
Materials
Organic Metallic
(Paints)
Inorganic
Hot Dipping
Chromate
Elastomers (Rubber) Zn (galvanizing) Portland Cement
Al, and Pb
Electroplating
Thermosettings (Ni, Cr, Zn, Sn, Cd) Phosphate Potassium Silicate
Thermally Sprayed
Anodizing Modified Potassium
Zn-rich coatings (any metal in
Silicate
powder form)
Cladding
Calcium Aluminates
Stainless steel
Weld Overlaying
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Organic Paints
Thermoplastic binders:
The solid film consists of entangled linear
chains as shown in the figure.
The most common thermoplastic binders
are:
Vinyls (polyvinyl chloride and
polyvinyl acetate copolymer)
high impermeability
widely used for steel immersed
in water Poly-vinyl-
highly resistant to oil and chloride
grease
applied by spraying
Acrylics (dissolved in water or
solvents)
Highly resistant to UV
High stability of color acrylic
Excellent for protection against
atmospheric exposure
Used in cars external body
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Binders: Thermosets
Thermosetting binders:
The solid film consists of rigid 3-
dimensional network of molecules.
The most common thermoplastic
binders are:
Epoxy
excellent resistance to acid and
alkaline environments
Excellent adhesion and used as
primers
Phenolic
Poly-urethanes epoxy
UV resistant
Excellent abrasion resistant
Used in aircraft, cars,
Polyester Urethanes
Thick films (1 mm)
Excellent abrasion resistant
phenolics
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Binders: Thermosets
An example hardener Resin
showing
polymerization of
a thermosetting
Polymer
(phenolic)
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Binders: organic oils
Organic oil binders:
The solid film form after drying vegetable oils by
oxidation to form 3-dimensional network of the
oil molecules.
Takes long time to dry up (few days).
The most common oil based binders are:
Alkyd (Good resistant to atmospheric condition)
linseed oil + ALCOHOL+ ORGANIC ACID
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Binders
Metal Surface
Anchor pattern
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1. Surface Preparation
See www.sherwin-williams.com for information of over 1000 paint systems for industrial and marine coatings.
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2. Selection of a Coat system
Example: an ARAMCO
approved paint system by
HEMPEL.
Note:
For atmospheric service
Surface preparation
specification
Primer coat
Intermediate coat
topcoat
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2. Selection of a Coat system
To decide upon a suitable system for the work
you want to do, follow this sequence:
identify the material to be painted
note which primer is most suitable
note which undercoats and topcoats are suitable for
each primer
decide on your topcoat preference.
select the primer and undercoat which allow that
topcoat.
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3. Applications
Manual (brushing and rolling)
Easy but difficult to control coating thickness
Spraying
Air spray (air is used to atomized and propel the
coating)
Airless spray (the coating container is pressurized
to atomize the coating in the gun)
32
Air-Spray Gun
1 5
3
Air Supply 6
4
2
5
1
Spray Gun Air Regulators
2 6
References:
1. Handbook of Corrosion Engineering by
P. R. Roberge
2. Corrosion Control by S.A. Bradford
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Inhibitors
Inhibitors are chemicals added in small amounts to the electrolyte to reduce
corrosion in closed systems such as in recirculation-cooling systems,
cooling towers, condenser tubes, and boilers.
The decision of using inhibitor involves an economical balance between
the cost of the inhibitor against the cost of corrosion.
Inhibitors are used widely in the oil extraction and production industries
and in cooling systems.
The composition of industrial inhibitors are secrets of their manufacturers.
Inhibitors react and adsorb to the metal surface and form one of the
following films:
A stable metal passive film
A barrier film of adsorbed inhibitor
A thick barrier layer of corrosion products or the inhibitor
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Inhibitors
Depending on the effect of the
adsorbed films on corrosion reactions,
inhibitors are classified as either:
anodic inhibitor (slow anodic
reactions)
cathodic inhibitor (the presence of
the adsorbed film slow down
cathodic reactions)
general inhibitor (slow both anodic
and cathodic)
Organic inhibitors
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Cathodic Inhibitors
Cathodic inhibitors can provide inhibition by two
different mechanisms:
cathodic poisoning
slow the kinetics of cathodic reactions
Example: arsenic compounds make the recombination of hydrogen
more difficult
H+ + H+ + 2e- H + H -- H2
slow
cathodic precipitates
Active elements of the inhibitor react with the electrolyte and form
oxides which precipitate on the cathodic areas to increase the
surface impedance and limit the diffusion of reducible cations
Example: Ca, Zn, and Mg salts.
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Common
inhibitors used
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Examples of Inhibitors