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Letter 42079
Glass in anodising process
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Hi,
I'm doing some cosmetic trials on anodising bead blasted aluminum and
was wondering if there are any risks to the performance of our
anodising line due to contamination from the glass.
Thanks,
John Peacey
- Gloucester, UK
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I can not think of any thing other than if you use a flouride in
your line, it might be consumed slightly faster. Most of any of the
broken beads that are stuck in the aluminum will come off during the
caustic etch step.
James Watts
- Navarre, Florida
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Elaborating on Watt's correct answer, glass dust, glass particles,
and all the contamination that is in/on the glass will imbed in the
soft aluminum - therefore you MUST heavily etch to undercut the
imbedded junk. The glass must not have been used on any other metal.
The glass will not contaminate the anodizing solution, it will fall
to the bottom, however, under some conditions of solution agitation
the glass dust will "occlude" in the anodizing coating.
Work was done at NASA Huntsville in the 1960's which occluded diamond
dust into hard coat anodic films.
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