Coating failures happen when the protective coating fails to protect the substrate, it no longer provides an esthetic look or serves its specified function. This can occur for a multitude of reasons, but the most common failures are caused by insufficient surface preparation. This can lead to adhesion failure where a paint or coating delaminates from the coating or surface below. Not properly preparing or cleaning the surface prior to coating can leave surface contamination such as rust, mildew, soluble salts, dust, dirt, or other abrasives making the coating application fail by blistering or peeling. These coating failures exemplify the importance of specifying the appropriate surface preparation and profile. Coating failures can also occur throughout the application, curing stage, or after application. The first step of prevention is determination.
To identify potential causes of coating failure, an independent investigation should be performed. A site visit including access to the structure with the coating failure and a forensic laboratory investigation is warranted.
Investigative tasks during site visit may include:
Testing for surface contamination is also done with such products as test patches, or sleeves.
Both types are used to extract or measure and analyze the soluble salt content on a substrate.
If the content is above the acceptable range specified, you would need to incorporate the use of a salt remover or maintenance wash to remove the salts, then retest prior to application. The wash reduces the content of dirt and salt. It contains no volatile organic compounds (VOC), is non-flammable and also biodegradable. Maintenance wash is recommended for use anywhere that these contaminants are identified and need to be removed prior to the coating process.
Summary: The best way to keep your coating from failing is to prevent surface contamination in the first place. Test, analyze, and clean your substrate prior to coating to prevent premature coating failure which can result in serious corrosion and operation issues resulting in economic loss. Ensure proper surface preparation by incorporating salt remover when warranted into your procedure. By following this process, you can ensure that you surface is clean of dirt and salts that cause premature coating failure.
For more information on coating failure see: General Coating Failure Cause and Prevention
For information on specific paint defects see: Blistering Paint, Cracking Paint and Other Paint Defects and Solutions
Visit our Protective Coatings Industry Page for Surface Preparation and Protective Coating Test Instruments.