Automotive paint

Robotic arm applying paint on car parts.

Automotive paint is paint used on automobiles for both protection and decoration purposes.[1][2] The paint layers total to around 100 µm.

Characterization

Modern automobile paint is applied in several layers, with a total thickness of around 100 µm(0.1mm).

History

In the early days of the automobile industry, paint was applied manually and dried for weeks at room temperature. As mass production of cars started, paint was dried in ovens. Nowadays, paint is usually applied by robotic arms and dried in just a few hours.

Environmental laws

Until several decades ago lead, chromium and other heavy metals were used in automotive paint. Environmental laws have prohibited this, which has resulted in a move to water-based paints. Up to 85% of lacquer paint can evaporate into the air, polluting the atmosphere. Enamel paint is better for the environment in that regard, and has become the most widely used paint nowadays.[1]

Processes and coatings

Pre Clean Process

High pressure water spray jets are directed to the body.

Phosphate

A phosphate coat is necessary to protect the body against corrosion effects and prepares the surface for the E-Coat.

E-COAT

The body is dipped into the Electro Coat Paint Operation (ELPO/E-Coat), then a high voltage is applied. The body works as a cathode and the paint as an anode sticking on the body surface. It is an eco-friendly painting process. In E-Coat, also called CED paint, utilisation is approx 99.9% and has great SST life compared to other painting processes.

Primer

See also: Primer (paint)

The primer is the first coat to be applied. The main functions of the primer are to act as a leveler and protector, and to make the base coat easier to apply to the component to which it is applied.

Basecoat

The base coat is applied after the primer coat. This coat contains the visual properties of color and effects, and is usually the one referred to as the paint. Base coat used in automotive applications is commonly divided into three categories: solid, metallic, and pearlescent pigments.

Clearcoat

Usually sprayed on top of a colored basecoat, clearcoat is a glossy and transparent coating that forms the final interface with the environment. For this reason, clearcoat must be durable enough to resist abrasion and chemically stable enough to withstand UV light. Clearcoat can be either solvent or water-borne.[4] One part and two part formulations are often referred to as 1k and 2k respectively.[5]

See also

Automotive Paint Suppliers

Automotive Paint Equipment Suppliers

References


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