Abstract
Design considerations for steel bridge coatings include exposure environment, aesthetics, application, and cost. Steel bridge coatings must offer protection against corrosion. Current techniques include the traditional three-coat zinc, epoxy, urethane systems, galvanizing, and thermal spray metallization. Another pathway for steel protection includes the use of decades-old inorganic zinc spray-applied coatings. This approach offers the performance of a metallized coating while using a conventional spray application. What is new is the use of an inorganic topcoat that maintains performance and fab shop throughput while adding color and aesthetics. This study compared a two-coat inorganic coating system alongside a galvanized, thermal spray metallizing, and a sealed thermal spray metallizing system in corrosion resistance lab testing. A discussion of applied costs and throughput is presented along with a review of the chemistry of this approach and the sustainability benefits it offers.
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