Powder Coating
The powder coating process was invented around 1945. This process puts a coating on an item electrostatically, which is then cured by heat. The finish is harder and tougher than conventional paint. The process is useful for coatings on metal used in many household appliances, aluminum products and automotive parts.
Because powder coating does not have a liquid carrier, it can produce thicker coatings than conventional liquid coatings, and can be double coated without running or sagging, and powder coating produces minimal appearance differences between horizontally coated surfaces and vertically coated surfaces. Because no carrier fluid evaporates away, the coating process emits few volatile organic compounds. Several powder colors can be applied before curing them all together, allowing color blending and bleed special effects in a single layer.
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