Paint & paint systems
- Paint composition
- Generic types of paint
- Paint systems
- Application equipment
- Application techniques
- Paint defects
- Calculations
- Technical data sheet
- Metallic coating-thermal spray
- Metallic coating-hot dip galvanizing
- Fire protective coatings
- Special coatings
- IOGP Definitions of Paint and Surface Treatment
Generic types of paint
Drying / curing mechanism
The properties of a paint film are closely related to how the binder dries or cures. The four most common drying / curing mechanisms are:
- Physical Drying (solvent evaporation)
- Oxidative Curing (reaction with oxygen in the air)
- Chemical Curing (chemical reaction between base and hardener)
- Coalescence (evaporation of water followed by merging of the paint droplets)
Physical drying
- The solvents evaporate
- Molecules pack and melt together to form a paint film
- No chemical reactions
Oxidative curing (drying)
- The solvents evaporate
- Oxygen enter the paint and the reaction starts
- The binder molecules link together through a chemical reaction with oxygen
Chemical curing
- The solvents, if present, evaporate
- After mixing the separate components together the individual reactive ingredients react together
- A three dimensional network is formed which gives the solid paint film
Proper mixing is a pre-requisite to obtain proper curing. Insufficient mixing makes it impossible for all the reactive ingredients to come in contact in the right proportions with each other and a three dimensional network will not be formed.
Coalescence (Physical drying waterborne paints)
- Water evaporate
- Dispersed droplets melt together
- Co-solvents evaporate to form a paint film
- No chemical reactions
Factors influencing the drying process
- Ventilation
- Temperature
- Film thickness
- Number of coats
- Evaporation rate of the solvents, if present
For water borne paints high relative humidity slows down the drying process
Curing mechanism of various binders
Physically drying:
- Vinyl
- Acrylic
Oxidatively curing:
- Alkyd
- Drying oils
- Epoxy ester
Chemically curing:
- Epoxy
- Polyurethane
- Polyester
- Vinyl ester
- Silicate
- Polysiloxane
Generic types of coatings
The generic type refers to the ingredient responsible for the basic properties of the paint. In most cases the binder dictates the properties, and defines the generic type.
Common generic types of paint
- Alkyd
- Vinyl
- Acrylic
- Epoxy
- Zinc rich epoxy
- Polyurethane
- Polysiloxane
- Inorganic zinc silicate
- Polyester
- Vinyl ester
- Silicone
Sometimes paint may be referred to as “modified”, e.g. modified epoxy paint. This may involve either a chemical modification of the binder or blending smaller amounts of an additional binder into the paint.
Typical properties of various generic types of paint
A. Alkyd paint
Advantages
- Good application properties
- component
- Good weather ability
- Good wetting properties
- Good recoatability
- Good leveling properties
- Good gloss retention
- Heat resistant up to 120 ˚C
Limitations
- Poor chemical resistance (especially against alkalis)
- Never to be used on Zinc
- Limited water resistance (submerged)
- Limited solvent resistance
- Limited film thickness per coat
B. Acrylic paint-Solvent borne
Advantages
- Physically drying
- Easy to recoat
- One component
- Good water resistance
- Relatively good chemical resistance
- Good weather resistance
Limitations
- High VOC
- Poor solvent resistance
- Low solid content
- Relatively poor wetting properties
- Thermoplastic
C. Unmodified epoxy paint
Advantages
- Very good chemical resistance
- High alkali resistance
- Moderate resistance to acids
- Good adhesion
- Very low permeability
- High mechanical strength
- Dry heat resistant up to 120˚C
Limitations
- Chalking
- Temperature affects cure time
- Over coating time affected by temperature. Some have short maximum overcoat times
D. Epoxy mastic paint (modified epoxy)
Advantages
- Surface tolerant
- High solids
- High build
Limitations
- Not UV - resistant
- Temperature dependent for curing
- Sweating-non reacted cure components
E. Zinc rich epoxy paint
Advantages
- Chemically curing
- Good corrosion protection
- Good adhesion
- Requires min. Sa 2½
- Good mechanical strength
- May be recoated with all types of paint, except alkyd based or very high build coatings >500µm
- Dry heat resistant up to 120˚C
Limitations
- Temperature dependent curing
- Film thickness: 25 - 90 um
- Not acid- and alkali resistant
- (Resistant between pH 5-9)
F. Polyurethane paint
Advantages
- Very good weather resistance
- Excellent gloss retention
- Very good chemical resistance
- Very good solvent resistance
- Cures down to 0 ˚C
Limitations
- May cause skin irritation
- May create toxic fumes in a fire
G. Zinc ethyl-silicate paint
Advantages
- Very good solvent resistance
- Very high heat resistance, up to 400˚ C (max 540 ˚C for short periods)
- Very high mechanical strength
- Very good adhesion to blast cleaned steel
- Can be overcoated with a wide range of coatings (not alkyd)
Limitations:
- Requires humidity in excess of 50% RH for curing
- DFT: 125 µm
- Mud-cracking or checking at higher DFT
H. Glass-flake reinforced polyester
Advantages
- Quick curing
- Variable curing time
- Application with airless spray
- Excellent mechanical strength
- Glass-flakes reduce shrinkage, increases mechanical strength and water resistance
- Very good chemical resistance
Limitations
- Short pot life
- Limited shelf life
- Recoating interval: 2 to 12 hours
- Should not be applied over zinc primers and galvanized surfaces
I. Acrylic waterborne paints
Advantages
- Very low VOC
- Water is relatively cheap and readily available
- Quick surface drying
- Simple cleaning of equipment
- Low risk of fire
Limitations
- Can not be used below 0˚C
- Dries slowly at high relative humidity
- Needs long time to reach full hardness
- Thermoplastic
- Poor solvent resistance
Common curing agents for Epoxy Paints
Polyamide
- Unmodified & modified epoxy paints
Amine and amine adduct
- Improved chemical resistance
- E.g. Tank coatings
Surface tolerance
- Surface tolerant paints adhere well and offer long term protective properties on substrates where optimum surface preparation is not possible or desired
- The surface tolerance depends largely on the wetting (penetrating) properties of the binder
- Most paints can be applied to steel blast cleaned to Sa 2½
- Not all paints possess the required wetting property for successful application on uneven substrates
- Surface tolerant paints give a longer life time on such substrates
Antifouling paints
Fouling is the settlement and growth of marine plants and animals on surfaces in the sea. There is an estimated 4-5.000 fouling species and these can be classified into:
1. Micro-fouling
- Generally referred to as slime, a complex viscous mixture of bacteria and microscopic organisms
2. Macro-fouling
- Which includes animals and plants
Examples of fouling in seawater
Micro-fouling
- Biofilm or slime
- Bacteria
- Blue green algae
- Diatoms
- Protozoa
- Other micro-organisms
- Up to 1 mm thick
Macro fouling - algae
- Grass
- Green algae
- Brown algae
- Red algae
- Grow only in presence of light
Macro fouling - animals
- Barnacles
- Mussels
- Tubeworms
- Hydroids
- Bryozoa
- Tunicates
How does fouling happen?
- Free floating or free swimming spores and larvae follow the currents, tides and waves
- They look for the opportunity to contact suitable surfaces
- Fouling happens when these larvae or spores settle and develop into an adult, small at first, but steadily growing
- Any man-made structure in the sea will be subjected to fouling (marine growth)
- The challenge is to create a surface which is not attractive or conducive for such growth
Fouling on ships’ hulls leads to:
- Increased frictional drag
- Increased fuel consumption
- Increased emissions to air
- Possible transmigration of non-indigenous species
- High cost of removal
The purpose of antifouling paints
- To prevent or reduce growth
- To provide better fuel economy over the sailing period
- To avoid growth penetrating the coating and thereby damage the corrosion protection
The composition of antifoulings
Antifouling paints contain the same main groups of raw materials as other paints plus additional biocides to prevent or reduce the settlement of marine growth.
- Binder
- Biocide
- Extenders
- Pigments
- Solvents
- Additives
The most common biocide used in antifouling paints is Cuprous oxide
Main types of antifouling paints:
Conventional antifoulings
- Soluble matrix paints
- Rosin as part of the binder
- Approximately 12 months protection
- Binders dissolves in water and biocide is released
NOTE: Danger of cracking and flaking if not quickly immersed in water
Long-life antifouling
- Insoluble matrix paints
- Only the biocides are released
- Effective protection is up to 24 months
- Leaves weak substrate for subsequent coat (leached layer)
- Sealer coat normally required
- Binder: Vinyl, acryl (possible to add small amount of rosin)
Self-polishing antifoulings
- Predictable performance
- Extended dry docking period
- Control of roughness and smoothing
- No “sandwich coatings” problems
- Lifetime directly proportional to dry film thickness
Antifouling for aluminium hulls
- Copper-containing antifouling must not be used directly on an aluminium hull
- Metallic copper in contact with aluminium will cause bi-metallic corrosion
- A full anti corrosive system must be applied on the aluminium hull before the antifouling
Shopprimers
Shopprimer definition
A quick drying paint applied as a thin film to a metal surface after blast cleaning, to give corrosion protection during the period before and during fabrication
Requirement: Must not interfere with the speed or quality of cutting and welding of the steel during fabrication, so DFT must be low
Shopprimer history
- In the early days shopprimers were designed for only temporary protection and was removed by blast cleaning before the steel was painted
- Later on, improved quality was developed which required only re-blasting of welds and mechanical / thermal damages before the steel was painted
- Today’s technology using only UHPWJ treatment before painting
- Shopprimer may now be a part of the long term protective paint system
Shopprimers – types
While other paints generally are classified according to their type of binder, shopprimers are often classified according to their main pigment content:
- Iron oxide shopprimers
- Zinc rich shopprimers
Types / pigments |
Binders |
Typical DFT (µm) |
Corrosion protection, typical (months) |
Iron oxide |
PVB(*) |
15-20 µm |
3 |
Epoxy |
15-20 µm |
5 |
|
Zinc rich |
Ethyl silicate |
10-15 µm |
10 |
Epoxy |
15-20 µm |
8 |
(*) Poly Vinyl Butyral
Iron oxide shopprimers – characteristics
Types / pigments |
Binders |
Advantages |
Limitation |
Iron oxide |
PVB(*) |
– One component – Quick drying – Flexibility |
– Low %-volume solids – Low heat resistance – Not compatible with cathodic protection |
Epoxy |
– Adhesion – Chemical resistance – Well suited with cathodic protection |
– Short pot life – Low flash point |
(*) Poly Vinyl Butyral
Zinc rich shopprimers – characteristics
Types / pigments |
Binders |
Advantages |
Limitation |
Zinc rich |
Ethyl silicate |
– Abrasion resistance – Corrosion protection – Allows high welding and burning speed – Few burning damages |
– Needs high air humidity for curing – Forms zinc salts on the surface – Zinc fumes from welding and burning may cause zinc fever |
Epoxy |
– Adhesion – Ease of over coating |
– Forms zinc salts on the surface – Zinc fumes from welding and burning may cause zinc fever |
Activities involved in shop priming
- Cleaning
- Blasting
- Application
- Handling
Controlling thickness and integrity of the film
- Use glass plates or smooth steel plates only
- Length of test panel must be sufficient to cover overlapping zones
- Glass plate: Hold against a light source to check film integrity (dry spray, pinholes, etc.)
- Steel panel: Thickness measurement (magnetic DFT gauge)
- Repair main steel plate if test panels were fixed to main plate
Coating over shop-primed steel
- Check for cleanliness / intact surface: OK
- If contaminated by zinc salts:
- Remove by High Pressure Water
- Cleaning or blast sweeping
- Rust, damage, welds should be treated according to specification
- Heat-affected areas (thermal damages) must receive treatment to specified standard