When Is It Cost
When Is It Cost
When Is It Cost
Selected Answers
Even the best, most expensive paints must be inspected in 3-7 year cycles when used in CUI
(Corrosion Under Insulation) conditions. Inspections most often mean scaffolding, removing all
cladding and insulation, intensive inspection, including a lot if UT testing of pits, blasting,
painting, re-insulating, re-cladding, removing scaffolding, etc. If thermal spray aluminum (TSA)
is used instead of paint, these inspection cycles are pushed out to 25 years (ExxonMobil) to 40
years (Shell).
In this case, blasting and recoating is not required, just inspection, as it is known that a properly
installed anodic TSA coating system will not corrode or “sacrifice” itself unless it is installed in
such a way that the TSA has to provide anodic protection for a large cathode (unfavorable
anode to cathode ratio) when an electrolyte (water or wet insulation) connects the TSA to a non-
TSA coated area. We don’t do this in the petrochemical field, as we coat an entire vessel,
column, or pipe (flange to flange) instead of just a tiny area and expect it to protect the entire
structure.
Regarding the cost of thermal spray in a refinery, one must consider the entire erected costs
(scaffolding, cladding, insulation, grit blasting and disposal, etc.) of a coating job and not just
“the coating.”
Around 6 years ago, ExxonMobil reported that when the entire erected costs are considered,
TSA coatings cost them 0.5%-1.5% more than liquid coatings; however, some of the paints
used in CUI service have doubled and tripled in price since then. Many times, thermal spray can
be applied at lower costs than wet paint when you consider factors like weather conditions, no
VOC regulations, ease of or less need for touch-up, robust coatings that can be applied offsite
and then installed, etc. As a pipeline applicator who did both wet paint and thermal spray
coating, we charged less for thermal spray than a three-coat paint system.
Applications of Thermal
Spray Aluminum
March 15th, 2021
Thermal Spray Aluminum (TSA) is a durable coating capable of providing complete corrosion protection
and significant lifetime improvement for equipment. Thermal spraying techniques provide a versatile
and cost-effective way of imparting high-performance coatings, lending thermal spray aluminum to a
huge range of industrial and infrastructure applications.
Thermal spray aluminum also imparts resistance to erosion and other types of mechanical wear.
Additional benefits of aluminum include relatively low cost and high operating temperature (up to
538°C).
The term “thermal spraying” denotes a group of distinct techniques, all of which involve heating a
feedstock material (usually in powder or wire form) and propelling it towards a target substrate. The
spray of melted or partially-melted feedstock material forms lamellae or “splats” on the target, which
build up to create a uniform coating.
Thermal spray aluminum most commonly uses wire arc spraying or flame spraying. Both of these
methods use aluminum wire as a feedstock, which is heated above melting point and sprayed across a
surface by a jet of compressed air or inert gas. The primary difference between these two methods is
the means of supplying energy to the aluminum wire: wire arc spraying uses an electric arc to melt the
aluminum, while combustion wire spraying uses an oxy-fuel flame. As the name suggests, wire arc
spraying uses a wire feedstock, which is much more economical than coating with powder – particularly
for large area substrates.
While arc spraying achieves higher throughput of wire, flame-spray has a higher build-rate for its lower
throughput, evening out the final coating rate. Flame spray torched also lead to higher, less-oxidized
coating quality and a more controlled spray pattern with less fumes and need for PPEs.
Thermal spray aluminum is a simple, versatile and cost-effective coating. Its anti-corrosive properties
lend it to widespread use in coating bridges, ship decks, large metal tanks, and other metal structural
components that would be otherwise susceptible to corrosion.
Saint-Gobain provides a complete range of flame spray coating technologies and metallic and ceramic
materials, including aluminum wire feedstocks for thermal spraying applications. Contact a member of
the team today if you would like to learn more.
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