Title: Electrophoretic application of paint.
1Electrophoretic application of paint.
Peter Hope, FIMF LVH Coatings Ltd.
2Electrophoretic painting what is it?
- Target surface must be electrically conductive.
- Target is immersed in the specially formulated
water-based paint bath and a d.c. voltage is
applied. - Paint solids are electrodeposited conformally
over conductive surfaces. - Similar to electroplating but depositing a
paint instead of a metal.
3Why would you consider the electrophoretic
application method?
- Your (conductive) widget is a complicated shape
that is difficult to paint any other way. - Complete and controlled surface coverage is
necessary for decoration and/or performance.
4 It must be Electrophoretic!
The paint on this car stops rust.
1960s American cars were first to have
electrophoretic paint as an anti-corrosion primer.
5BIG - during 2003, 42 million vehicles
manufactured world wide requiring an estimated
42000 metric tonnes of electrophoretic paint
solids.
6Fibre length 6mm Fibre radius 3.5 microns Tip
radius 50nm
SMALL - 2000 to 2008 Electron microscope probes
and other micro-research structures require less
than 1gm of electrophoretic paint solids!
7SMALL items - but large numbers Spectacle
frames.
8Door and window hardware.
9 various other complex-shaped consumer items..
10and difficult-to-paint industrial components.
11..Automotive functional parts
12.Automotive trim parts
13..Specialist architectural.
14Process advantages.
- Very suitable for painting complicated shaped
items. - High productivity especially when automated.
- High material utilisation/low wastage compared to
other application methods such as spraying.
15Electrophoretic vs. Spraying Overspray
wastes material. Can be labour Intensive. Rack
/support gets coated also waste of material.
Electrophoretic application enables very high
transfer efficiency.
16Simple electrophoretic paint line schematic.
Drag-out rinsed off with clean permeate
Unpainted part
Painted part drag-out
Painted part
From pre-treatment
To oven
Paint bath
Permeate Drag-out
Raw permeate
UF
Clean permeate
I E
Using ultrafiltration (UF) rinse/reclaim closed
loop - nearly 100 material utilisation with
minimum waste.
17Appropriateness of use.( disadvantages)
- Mainly suitable for large continuous production
quantities of a single finish. - Requires investment in specialised plant and
equipment.
18Continuous RD produces an increasing number
of Electrophoretic painting capabilities..
19Equipment/installation.
- Basic requirements are a coating bath, rectifier,
filtration, purified water and a curing method. - Bath size and installation footprint depends upon
the size and production rate requirement of the
widget. - Bath sizes vary from less than 100 litres to more
than 500000 litres. - Easily incorporated into electroplating lines
20Curing methods.
- Thermal curing is possible from about 80C up to
about 190C. Thermal curing below about 120C tends
to limit the potential for high chemical
resistance. - Both hot air and Infra-Red techniques are used
for thermal curing. - UV curing systems are available that can be
processed below 80C.
21Hardness, wear resistance and friction control.
- Hardness and wear resistance can now be
comparable with brass and aluminium by using
nanocomposite technology. - Incorporation of various dry film lubricants
provides highly wear resistant low friction
coatings.
22Corrosion protection.
- Electrophoretic paints can provide all-over
corrosion protection for most metals. - Good compatibility with most traditional and
new anti-corrosive pre-treatments. - Certain instances do not require the use of any
separate anti-corrosive treatment notably
anodic electrophoretics over some aluminium
alloys.
23Chemical resistance.
- Different resin systems are available that will
cover many industrial requirements. - Automotive grades based on epoxies have
intrinsically high chemical resistance.
24Resistance to weathering.
- The main problems are resin breakdown and colour
change due to the effects of UV radiation in
sunlight. - Exterior durable resin systems are available with
compatible fade-resistant colourants as required.
25Decoration.
- Electrophoretics can be coloured in a wide
variety of effects similar to conventional
paints. Even metallic or pearlescent effects
are possible to some extent. - A characteristic is the incorporation of
transparent colourants to give coloured metal
effects over reflective white substrates such
as bright nickel or polished zinc and aluminium. - Gloss can be controlled independently of colour
effect.
26Other capabilities.
- Photoresists 2D or 3D surface imaging for
printed circuits, nameplates and chemical
milling. - Conductive coatings - grounding, shielding,
anti-static and multi-layer electrophoretic
coating. - Something else? Ask and you might get!
27Electrophoretic summary.
- Mature and accessible industrial painting
process. - Especially appropriate for complicated shapes in
high production quantities. - Very wide capabilities general purpose to
highly specialised. - Ease of automation minimises unit costs by high
productivity. - High material utilisation with minimal waste.
28Thank you for your attention!