What is Galvanizing?

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What is Galvanizing? Features of Galvanized Steels Steels, galvanized steels and aluminum alloys are industrially important metals that are produced in large quantities. Of these materials the corrosion protection of steel is most challenging, even if iron is nobler than zinc or aluminum. To prevent steel parts from rusting there are two options: 

Switch to a metal that will not corrode when exposed to water

Coat the steel with a physical barrier to prevent water from reacting with the iron

As with most decisions in manufacturing, both of these options are primarily evaluated in terms of cost. Galvanization or galvanizing is the process of applying a protective zinc coating to steel or iron, to prevent rusting. The most common method is hot-dip galvanizing, in which the parts are submerged in a bath of molten zinc. The zinc coating of hot-dipped galvanized steel will last in the harshest soil is 35 to 50 years and in less corrosive soil 75 years or more. Although humidity affects corrosion, temperature itself has less of an impact. Galvanized zinc coatings respond well in extreme cold and hot temperatures. The strength of steel or galvanized steel depends on what is added during the manufacturing process. The main difference between the two is that galvanized steel has a protective coating that keeps steel from rusting. Galvanic protection, also known as cathodic protection, protects the underlying steel substrate by corroding preferentially, thus sacrificing itself in the process. This type of protection is especially useful for situations where the protected steel may become exposed due to scratches, cuts, dents or coating damage. Because zinc is a highly reactive and electronegative metal, it will assume the role of the anode, therefore corroding first in the event that the adjacent steel is unprotected. Hot dip galvanizing services offered by Metallica can help the organization to stay ahead in competition.

Types of Galvanizing 

Batch hot dip galvanizing:- In hot dip galvanizing, the metal is dipped into a bath of molten zinc. This creates a much thicker layer and is usually used for much larger pieces of metal, such as highway barriers. The galvanizing process consists of three basic steps: surface preparation, galvanizing and in-spection. The coating thickness of hot dip galvanization generally is about 80-100 µm.

Continuous galvanizing processes (in-line galvanizing):- Cleaned steel wire is passed through a lead/zinc bath at high speed (180 m/minute) to produce a continuously galvanized wire. It is comparable to those of continuously galvanized sheet. The thickness of the coating changes according to the coating grade and diameter of the wire


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