The hot dip galvanizing process
Technical seminar
The hot dip galvanizing process
• Loading - jigging
• Degreasing Hot caustic
• Pickling Hydrochloric acid
• Pre-fluxing Zinc am. chloride
• Hot dip galvanizing Molten zinc
• Quenching Dichromate
The hot dip galvanizing process
Loading - jigging
The steel items need to be supported during the hot dip galvanizing
process.
Can the item be easily jigged?
Will touch marks be a problem?
Solutions and molten zinc must be able to flow into all sections and
drain off all sections.
Steel items must be designed to prevent air, solutions and molten
zinc becoming trapped
Check design for possible problems
The hot dip galvanizing process
Degreasing
A hot (90oC) caustic bath is used to remove -
Oil, grease, paint another organic compounds
If these contaminating materials are not removed, the next stage of
the process (pickling) is affected
Check if any paint is on item - some paints are not easily removed
and may require abrasive blasting before galvanizing
Some pipes and pipe fittings have a black varnish coating that cannot
be removed in the caustic bath.
The hot dip galvanizing process
Acid pickling
The steel items are immersed in hydrochloric acid to remove - rust,
mill scale and other metal oxides
The steel surface must be perfectly clean of these oxides for the
molten zinc to react with the steel
Very heavy rust may not be easily removed by pickling - badly rusted
items should be abrasive blasted or mechanically cleaned first.
The hot dip galvanizing process
Pre-fluxing
Steel items are water rinsed after pickling and immersed in hot (70-
80oC) zinc ammonium chloride (ZAC) solution.
The ZAC solution conditions the clean steel surface ready for hot
dip galvanizing.
Good pre-treatment = good quality galvanizing
The hot dip galvanizing process
Quenching
After hot dip galvanized steel item is removed from the galvanizing
bath, it is immediately quenched in a sodium dichromate solution
The dichromate quenching cools the item so that it can be quickly
handled and passivates the surface of the galvanized coating to
maintain its bright appearance.
The hot dip galvanizing process
Hot dip galvanizing
The steel is immersed in molten zinc (temp 4500C)
The clean steel surface reacts with the molten zinc to form a zinc-iron
alloy which is very strongly bonded to the surface.
The hot dip galvanized coating forms in 3-5 minutes, depending on the
steel thickness.
Free zinc layer
Galvanized coating Alloy layers
Steel Micrograph - 100 X
The hot dip galvanizing process
Quenching
After hot dip galvanized steel item is removed from the galvanizing
bath, it is immediately quenched in a sodium dichromate solution
The dichromate quenching cools the item so that it can be quickly
handled and conditions the surface of the galvanized coating to
maintain its bright appearance.
Dichromate quenching will reduce white rusting problems. White rust
forms when rainwater reacts with newly galvanized steel to form zinc
hydroxide.
Poor storage or HDG steel will also promote white rust.
The hot dip galvanizing process
Characteristics
• Typically 65 - 150 microns thick ( 1 mm = 1000 microns)
• Zinc iron alloy layers make up 80% - 100% of the
coating.
• The zinc-iron alloy layers are harder than 250 grade steel
Zinc
Zinc-iron alloys
Steel
Micrograph of hot dip galvanized coating
The hot dip galvanizing process
Coating comparisons
Compared to zinc electroplating (ZEP)and continuous galvanizing
(CG), hot dip galvanizing (HDG) is better because…..
- HDG is thicker and will last over 50 years or more without
rusting
- HDG is harder and is 5 times more abrasion resistant than ZEP
and CG
- HDG coats all external and internal surfaces and edges. All
CG coatings have cut, exposed edges after processing.
Coating thickness - microns
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Electroplating
Z350 Gal. sheet
HDG Light
HDG Heavy
galvanized products
Coating thickness of coatings on
The hot dip galvanizing process
Zinc cost versus surface area versus zinc pickup
Zinc price 2.00/kg
Section thickness - mm 1 2 3 5 5 10 15 20
Surface area/t - m 2 255 128 85 51 51 26 17 13
Zinc pickup - 450 g/m2 115 57 38 23 23 11 8 6
Cost $/t 230 115 77 46 46 23 15 11
Zinc pickup - 600 g/m2 153 77 51 31 31 15 10 8
Cost $/t 306 153 102 61 61 31 20 15
Zinc pickup - 700 g/m2 179 89 60 36 36 18 12 9
Cost $/t 357 179 119 71 71 36 24 18
Zinc pickup - 800 g/m2 204 102 68 41 41 20 14 10
Cost $/t 408 204 136 82 82 41 27 20
Zinc pickup - 1000 g/m2 255 128 85 51 51 26 17 13
Cost $/t 510 255 170 102 102 51 34 26
Good design reduces excessive zinc pick-up