What does the “salt spray test” for colored aluminum coils measure?

What does the “salt spray test” for colored aluminum coils measure?

The Salt Spray Test for Color-Coated Aluminum Coils: Core Metrics

The salt spray test (specifically ASTM B117 or ISO 9227) for color-coated aluminum coils measures the corrosive undercut resistance, coating adhesion, and filiform corrosion susceptibility of the prepainted aluminum system. By exposing the specimen to a continuous, atomized 5% sodium chloride (NaCl) solution at a controlled temperature of 35°C, the test accelerates the electrochemical oxidation of the underlying aluminum substrate. It quantifies how effectively the pre-treatment layer (e.g., chromate or non-chromate conversion coating) and the organic topcoat (PVDF, PE, or PUR-PA) prevent moisture and chloride ions from penetrating the paint-metal interface, thereby predicting long-term atmospheric durability in coastal and industrial environments.

Technical Performance Matrix: Coating Degradation & Corrosion Resistance

The table below outlines how different color-coated aluminum specifications perform under accelerated corrosion testing and their corresponding structural metrics.

Aluminum Alloy GradeCoating TypePre-Treatment TypeTopcoat Thickness (μm)Neutral Salt Spray (NSS) Resistance (Hours)Blistering / Undercut Rating (ASTM D1654)Primary B2B Application Scenario
AA 3003 / 3105Regular Modified Polyester (PE)Non-Chromate Conversion15 – 20≥ 500≤ 2 mm creepage from scribeResidential roofing, interior wall cladding
AA 3003 / 3004High-Durability Polyester (HDP)Chromate Conversion20 – 25≥ 1,000≤ 1 mm creepage from scribeIndustrial roofing, warehouse facades
AA 5052 / 5754Polyvinylidene Fluoride (PVDF 70/30)Multi-Layer Chromate25 – 35≥ 3,0000 mm (No creepage/blistering)Coastal architecture, curtain walls, marine trim
AA 6061 / 5052Polyurethane-Polyamide (PUR-PA)Anodized + Conversion30 – 40≥ 2,000≤ 0.5 mm creepageHeavy industrial zones, chemical processing plants

Failure Modes Evaluated by Salt Spray Testing

Filiform Corrosion Resistance

For color-coated aluminum coils deployed in humid, coastal environments, filiform corrosion represents a catastrophic structural risk. This localized, thread-like corrosion occurs beneath the organic coating when moisture and chlorides penetrate a microscopic defect. The salt spray test, often followed by a humidity cycle (ISO 4623-2), evaluates how effectively the pre-treatment chemistry passivates the aluminum substrate to arrest this filamentary growth.

Coating-Substrate Adhesion Degradation

The continuous exposure to hot, atomized brine breaks down secondary molecular bonds between the primer coat and the metal substrate. By evaluating the panel post-test via cross-hatch tape adhesion (ASTM D3359), engineers can verify if the interlayer adhesion can withstand extreme osmotic pressure without peeling or delaminating.

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