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THE POWDER COATING INSTITUTE 2121 Eisenhower Avenue / Suite 401 / Alexandria, VA 22314 Phone: (703) 684-1770 or (800) 988-COAT / Fax: (703) 684-1771 E-mail: pci-info@powdercoating.org
Powder Coating Teams With Magnesium
for Growth in High-Tech Consumer Products As more electronics equipment manufacturers move beyond plastic to magnesium to make cell phones and laptop computers lighter and more durable, powder coating provides the high-end finish that consumers have come to expect while contributing to the external durability of the product. For Applied Coating Technology, Inc., a custom coater located in Minneapolis, the new high-tech role for powder coating offers the potential for new product lines. "Magnesium has been a big area of growth for us," said Mike Meagher, ACT's vice president of manufacturing and engineering. Since ACT took its first magnesium job three years ago coating laptop computers, the orders have continued coming in. Bar code scanners for use in parcel delivery have already moved from plastic to magnesium. Cell phone manufacturers are finding that magnesium offers a lighter phone with a more stable frame. Seattle-based Itonics, Inc. was ACT's first partner in magnesium three years ago. The company manufactures laptop computers for clients who use them in service on the road, including Sears' service technicians and AT&T's diagnostic teams. "Itonics makes a water-tight laptop that the technician can throw on the front seat of his van, and that will fall off the seat onto the floor," said Meagher. The laptop, fitted with a rubbered armor boot to absorb the daily impact of life on the road, relies on powder coating for abrasion resistance as it jolts and bounces from job to job. The magnesium is a critical component for the road-hardy laptops, making them lightweight and durable. ACT faced a few significant hurdles in the preparation of the magnesium surface prior to powder coating. They knew from previous experience that a process that only cleans the surface would result in powder adhesion problems with the magnesium substrate. Industry standards for the treatment of magnesium prior to painting called for an alkaline chromate process. However, that process proved to be less than desirable to ACT because of waste treatment and disposal concerns. An alternative chromate process proved ineffective for ACT. The alternative chromate process left too many byproducts or "smut" on the metal, which resulted in a number of issues from appearance to performance of the powder topcoat. "Magnesium presents a lot of problems in getting cleaned and prepped," Meagher said. One of those problems is de-gassing the porous magnesium to prevent the coating from trapping pockets of air and driving them out during the curing process, creating disruptions in the finish. "You can't just clean the magnesium. It doesn't lend itself to traditional prepping." ACT called in its pretreatment supplier to solve the pretreatment problem and devise a process that provided the quality, performance and environmental impact that ACT and their customer required. They developed a novel pretreatment process for magnesium that did not produce the "smut" on the surface of the magnesium and included the following sequence:
Alkaline Cleaning
Water Rinsing Organo-metallic Composite Coating Water Rinsing The selection of a specially formulated conversion coating was the key. The product was designed for use as a reactive (rinse-able) coating for reactive substrates. "The critical step was eliminating the smut and getting the powder coating to stick to the substrate," said Meagher. "With that problem solved, powder coatings fit another unique application."
Keeping up with technology is nothing new for ACT, which began powder coating in 1976 for Litton's microwave ovens. "Over the years we've increased the amount of powder work we do and now about 60 percent of our painting is with powder," Meagher said. "It's become a requested finish for quality, durability and environmental reasons."
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