Title: Applying Coatings over Flash Rust in a Marine Environment
1Applying Coatings over Flash Rust in a Marine
Environment
2Learning Outcomes
- This webinar will discuss the levels of flash
rust as defined in SSPC-SP 12, how to evaluate
flash rust and the impact it can have on coating
performance.
3Definitions
- Flash rust
- Occurs on carbon steel from the time the
waterjetting process cleans the surface to the
time the water used for the cleaning process
dries. - Rust-back
- Used in dry abrasive blast standards
- Occurs when dry, bare steel is exposed to
conditions of high humidity, moisture, or a
corrosive atmosphere. - Rust bloom
- Generic term to describe uniform rust spread
evenly over a large section of a surface
4Ultra High Pressure Waterjetting
- Method of surface preparation
- May leave wet surface which can develop flash
rust - Two types of equipment
- Robotic Method
- Closed Loop
- Open Loop
- Hand Lance Method
5Robotic Equipment
- Incorporates water removal devices
- Little to no flash rust
6Hand Lance Equipment
- Used to clean areas with complex shapes
- Do not incorporate water removal devices
- Surface tend to remain wet longer and develop
flash rust - Can blow down with air to minimize flash rust
- Flash rust may require remediation prior to
painting - Wiping
- Pressure washing
- Abrasive blasting
7SSPC-SP 12Surface Preparation and Cleaning of
Metals by Waterjetting Prior to Recoating
Visible Contaminants
Non-Visible Contaminants
Flash Rust
8SSPC-SP 12Surface Preparation and Cleaning of
Metals by Waterjetting Prior to Recoating
- Four levels of visible contaminants
- WJ-1 (Clean to Bare Substrate), WJ-2 (Substantial
Cleaning), WJ-3 (Thorough Cleaning), WJ-4 (Light
Cleaning) - Four levels of flash rust
- None, Light (L), Moderate (M), Heavy (H)
- Three levels of non-visible contaminants
- NV-1 (below detection limits), NV-2 (varying
requirements), NV-3 (less than 50 µg/cm² of
chloride or sulfate)
9Coating Over Flash Rust
- Requirement depends on coating material,
performance expectations, service environment,
etc. - Some products and owners allow coatings to be
applied over Moderate levels of flash rust - Other products and owners only allow coating over
Light levels or no flash rust
10Inspecting Flash Rusted Surfaces
11SSPC-SP 12Surface Preparation and Cleaning of
Metals by Waterjetting Prior to Recoating
Flash Rust How do we describe this?
12SSPC-SP 12
- The levels of flash rust are defined as
- No flash rust
- Light (L)
- Exhibits small quantities of a yellow-brown rust
layer that is tightly adherent and not easily
removed by lightly wiping with a cloth. - Moderate (M)
- Exhibits small quantities of a yellow-brown rust
layer that is tightly adherent and leaves light
marks on a cloth that is lightly wiped over the
surface. - Heavy (H)
- Exhibits a layer of heavy red-brown rust that
hides the initial surface condition completely
and is loosely adherent, easily comes off and
leaves significant marks on a cloth that is
lightly wiped over the surface.
13Descriptors of Flash Rust- SSPC SP-12/VIS-4
Metric Light Moderate Heavy
Color Yellow-brown Yellow-brown Red-brown
Substrate Steel substrate may be observed Obscures the original steel surface Hides the initial surface condition completely
Lightly wiping with a cloth Not easily removed Leaves light marks Leaves significant marks
Volume Small quantities of arust layer Exhibits a layer ofrust Exhibits a layer of heavyrust
Distribution Evenly distributed or present in patches Evenly distributed or present in patches Evenly distributed or present in patches
Adhesion Tightly adherent Reasonably well adherent Loosely adherent, easily comes off
14Descriptors of Flash Rust in SSPC-SP 12/VIS-4
Metric Light Moderate Heavy
Color Yellow-brown Yellow-brown Red-brown
Substrate Steel substrate may be observed Obscures the original steel surface Hides the initial surface condition completely
Lightly wiping with a cloth Not easily removed Leaves light marks Leaves significant marks
Volume Small quantities of arust layer Exhibits a layer ofrust Exhibits a layer of heavyrust
Distribution Evenly distributed or present in patches Evenly distributed or present in patches Evenly distributed or present in patches
Adhesion Tightly adherent Reasonably well adherent Loosely adherent, easily comes off
What are the differences?
15Descriptors of Flash Rust in SSPC-SP 12/VIS-4
Metric Light Moderate Heavy
Color Yellow-brown Yellow-brown Red-brown
Substrate Steel substrate may be observed Obscures the original steel surface Hides the initial surface condition completely
Lightly wiping with a cloth Not easily removed Leaves light marks Leaves significant marks
Volume Small quantities of arust layer Exhibits a layer ofrust Exhibits a layer of heavyrust
Distribution Evenly distributed or present in patches Evenly distributed or present in patches Evenly distributed or present in patches
Adhesion Tightly adherent Reasonably well adherent Loosely adherent, easily comes off
More distinct differences
16Descriptors of Flash Rust in SSPC-SP 12
Metric Light Moderate Heavy
Color Yellow-brown Yellow-brown Red-brown
Substrate Steel substrate may be observed Obscures the original steel surface Hides the initial surface condition completely
Lightly wiping with a cloth Not easily removed Leaves light marks Leaves significant marks
Volume Small quantities of arust layer Exhibits a layer ofrust Exhibits a layer of heavyrust
Distribution Evenly distributed or present in patches Evenly distributed or present in patches Evenly distributed or present in patches
Adhesion Tightly adherent Reasonably well adherent Loosely adherent, easily comes off
Not Quantitative
Some distinctions less clear
Which metric takes precedence?
17How to Determine Level of Flash Rust
18Enhancements/Alternative Tests
- Recommended Guidelines for Evaluating Flash Rust
(National Shipbuilding Research Program) - Ten Tape Test (Hempel)
- Tape Transmittance Test (U.S. Navy Adjudication
Tool)
19Recommended Guidelines forEvaluating Flash Rust
- Developed by the U.S. National Shipbuilding
Research Program - Contains a table which breaks down the flash rust
definitions - Discusses impact of inspection conditions
- Time, illumination, distance
- Provides a more detailed method for performing
brush-wipe test - Discusses pressure washing for remediation
20Suggested Brush-Cloth Wiping Test
- Recommended to improve consistency of evaluation
21Suggested Brush-Cloth Wiping Test
22Removal of Flash Rust by Pressure Washing
23Hempel Ten Tape Test
Moderate
Heavy
24Tape Transmittance Test
- Adaptation of Hempel 10 tape test
- Apply tape to flash rust
- Rub as hard as necessary with finger
- Affix tape to clear glass slide
- Measure percent light transmittance through tapes
with and without flash rust - Difference between measurements is indicative of
flash rust (higher is worst)
Possible Accept/Reject Criteria
25(No Transcript)
26Works with different tapesand meters
27Light (1-8 Change in Transmittance)
28Moderate (10-20 Change in Transmittance)
29Moderate-Heavy (14-24 Change in Transmittance)
30Heavy (21-50 Change in Transmittance)
31Applying Coatings Over Flash Rust
32Concerns Regarding Coating Over Flash Rust
- Flash Rust may contain contaminants
- Could lead to undercutting, osmotic blistering or
loss of adhesion - Surface should be tested for non-visible
contaminants - Surface should have been thoroughly cleaned
before flash rusting begins - Flash Rust may interfere with adhesion
- Does the coating adequately wet the flash rust?
- Depends on coating chemistry as well as flash rust
33Benefit of Allowing Coating Over Flash Rust
- Reduce surface preparation cost as more flash
rust is allowed - Allows operations to be sequenced more
efficiently - One source estimated savings of 20 of typical
waterjetting surface preparation cost - Depends on extent of remediation required (e.g.,
complexity of structure, cleanliness requirement)
34Suitability of Flash Rust for Coating
- Several studies have shown that ultrahigh
pressure waterjetting provides an excellent
surface for coatings - Most agree that some level of flash rust is
acceptable for common marine quality epoxy based
coating systems - Typically either Light or Moderate is the
allowable flash rust level - Predominate concern is accurately
characterization - Must be cleaned first (i.e., no old rust)
35Laboratory Data
- Lab testing suggests Moderate Flash Rust does not
significantly impact cathodic disbondment of
marine grade epoxies
36Adhesion Data from Ships In Service
37Inspecting Coating Over Flash Rust
- Validate performance by
- Adhesion Test (Pull-off or knife cut)
- Close inspection for corrosion or blistering
initiating at difficult to clean surfaces - Chemically removing coating to observe substrate
38Key Concepts
- SSPC SP-12 contains three important criteria for
a waterjet cleaned surface - Visible contaminants, Flash Rust non-visible
contaminants - Current flash rust definitions are subjective
descriptions of color, appearance and adhesion - Several techniques are available which can
improve on the current definitions - Communication between contractor, inspector,
owner and coating supplier will facilitate
consistent interpretation
39Key Concepts
- Flash rust can be painted over successfully
- The allowable level depends on factors such as
the coating material and service environment - Flash rust can adversely impact coating
performance - Can cause poor adhesion or osmotic blistering
40Questions?