Blasting Of Bars:
Reinforcing steel is blast-cleaned to a near white metal finish using abrasive material (shots & grits) in Shot Blaster. The shots clean the surface of the bar & grits provide an anchor (40 – 100µm) to the bar surface.
Heating Of Bars:
The blasted bars are heated to required temperature specified by the Epoxy powder manufacturer (around 230°C) by passing them through an electric induction heater.
Coating Of Bars:
The heated bars are then passed through an Epoxy coating booth where epoxy powder is applied electrostatically. As the powder leaves the gun, an electrical charge is imparted to the epoxy powder particles. These electrically charged particles are attracted to the grounded steel surface providing a uniform coverage of the coating. When the dry powder touches the hot steel, it melts, flows, quickly gels as a film (200 –300 µm thick) on the reinforcing bars and on its deformations while the residual heat cures the coating.
Cooling Of Bars:
The coated bars after curing are passed through a cooling tunnel, where water is sprayed on to the bars to cool them. The bars are then kicked off on to the final inspection rack for testing and inspection. The testing on coated bars is carried as per ASTM775 and IS 13620 or such specification requirements. The acceptance tests usually conducted are thickness measurements, flexibility test and holiday test. Once they are inspected they are bundled/strapped for dispatch to the job site for fabrication and will be part of the structure
Fusion-bonded epoxy coating principally protects against corrosion by serving as an electrochemical and a physical barrier that isolates the steel from the oxygen, moisture, & chloride ions that cause corrosion. Epoxy coating has high electrical resistance, which blocks the flow of electrons that make up the electrochemical process of corrosion. In addition to serving as a circuit breaker, the coating protects in way that is less obvious: coating reduces the size and number of potential cathodic sites, which limits the rate of corrosion reaction that could occur. As a matter of fact, for macrocell corrosion to take place, a large area of steel surface is needed to serve as the cathode where oxygen reduction can occur. The coating almost eliminates such cathodic reaction.