BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention is related to an improved process for forming multilayer finishes
on automobiles and trucks. In particular, the process forms finishes that have an
improved appearance.
[0002] Multilayer finishes, in particular, clear coat/base coat finishes are well known
in the art, as shown, for example, in Benefiel et al US 3,639,147, issued February
1, 1972. Generally, solvent based coating compositions have been used to form these
multilayer finishes. To comply with current air quality standards, water borne base
coat finishes in combination with either solvent based or water based clear coat finishes
are being tested for use. However, it would be desirable to improve the appearance
of water borne base coat finishes containing metallic flake pigments. In particular,
improvements in head-on-brightness would be desired. This invention provides an improved
process and a composition that can be applied by this process to form a clear coat/base
coat finish with water borne base coating compositions containing metallic flake pigments
that have a high quality appearance that is acceptable to the automotive industry.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0003] This invention is directed to an improved process for applying a multilayer finish
to a substrate that has a primer layer adhered thereto and a layer of a water borne
base coating composition containing metallic flake pigments and a layer of a clear
top coating composition; the improvement that is used with this process comprises
the following:
applying a layer of a waterborne guide coating composition containing an aqueous carrier
and a polymeric binder to the primer layer before application of the water borne base
coating composition and drying the guide coating at ambient temperatures or at an
elevated temperature without crosslinking or curing the guide coating and then applying
the waterborne base coating composition to the guide coating and clear top coating
composition to the base coating and baking at elevated temperatures to fully cure
the resulting multilayer finish; whereby the resulting multilayer finish on the substrate
comprising the guide coating, base coating and clear topcoating has an improved appearance.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0004] The improved process of this invention is used to improved the appearance of a water
borne base coating composition/clear coating composition used for automobiles and
trucks. In this process, a guide coating is applied over the primer coating of the
substrate and then dried but not cured. The guide coat can be dried at ambient temperatures
e.g. 20-25°C or baked at elevated temperatures up to 180°C for a short time or exposed
to infrared radiation for rapid drying taking care not to crosslink the guide coat.
Then the water borne base coating is applied over the guide coating and then the clear
coating composition is applied over the base coating and the resulting coated substrate
is baked at an elevated temperature to form a fully cured multilayer finish. The resulting
base coat/clear coat finish has an improved appearance, particularly for head-on-brightness,
in comparison to clear coat/color coat finishes that do not use a guiding coating
composition.
[0005] The guide coating composition is an aqueous based composition containing about 10-75%
by weight of a film forming binder and preferably, a crosslinking agent and pigments.
Typically, an aqueous latex is used as the film forming binder and preferably, an
acrylic latex is used. An alkylated melamine formaldehyde crosslinking agent can be
used in the composition. Any of the conventional pigments used for coating compositions
or primers can be used in the composition.
[0006] Usually, the binder of the guide coating composition is an acrylic latex but other
water dispersible or water soluble polymers can be used. The latex is prepared by
a conventional emulsion polymerization process in which monomers, a polymerization
catalyst such as ammonium persulfate, water, surfactants and usually a neutralizing
agent such as ammonia or an amine such as amino ethyl propanol are utilized. The polymerization
is carried out under conventional temperatures of about 50-90°C for about 1-5 hours
to form a latex.
[0007] The monomers used for the latex are alkyl methacrylates, alkyl acrylates, hydroxy
alkyl acrylates and methacrylates and an ethylenically unsaturated polymerizable mono
or di carboxylic acids. Difunctional acrylates or methacrylates also can be used.
[0008] Typical alkyl methacrylates are methyl methacrylate, ethyl methacrylate, propyl methacrylate,
butyl methacrylate, hexyl methacrylate, octyl methacrylate, nonyl methacrylate, lauryl
methacrylate and the like.
[0009] Typical alkyl acrylates are methyl acrylate, ethyl acrylate, propyl acrylate, butyl
acrylate, hexyl acrylate, octyl acrylate, nonyl acrylate, lauryl acrylate and the
like.
[0010] Typical hydroxy alkyl acrylates and hydroxy alkyl methacrylates that can be used
are hydroxy ethyl methacrylate, hydroxy propyl methacrylate, hydroxy butyl methacrylate,
hydroxy ethyl acrylate, hydroxy propyl acrylate, hydroxy butyl acrylate and the like.
[0011] Typical polymerizable mono or di carboxlic acids that can be used are methacrylic
acid, acrylic acid, itaconic acid, maleic acid and the like.
[0012] Difunctional monomers that can be used are allyl methacrylate, allyl acrylate and
other diacrylates.
[0013] One preferred latex polymer contains 10-20% by weight methyl methacrylate, 70-80%
by weight butyl acrylate, 2-9% by weight hydroxy ethyl acrylate, and 1-5% by weight
methacrylic acid.
[0014] The latex itself without a crosslinking agent can be used as a guide coating composition.
This has an advantage that the latex does not crosslink on drying or baking at an
elevated temperature.
[0015] Generally, the guide coating contains about 5-40% by weight, based on the weight
of the binder, of the crosslinking agent. One preferred composition contains about
5-30% by weight of the crosslinking agent and 70-95% of the latex polymer.
[0016] Typical monomeric and polymeric alkylated melamine formaldehyde crosslinking agents
that can be used are partially or highly methylated melamine formaldehyde resins,such
as "Cymel" 300 resins, mixed ether and butylated melamine formalhyde resins or other
partially or fully alklated melamine formaldehyde resins having 1-6 carbons in the
alkyl group. One preferred resin is "Cymel" 325 which is a methylated melamine formaldehyde
resin that has a methoxymethyl-imino functionality. Another preferred resin is "Cymel"
303 which is a highly methylated melamine formaldehyde resin containing reactive alkoxy
groups.
[0017] The guide coating composition can be used as an unpigmented clear but preferably
contains pigments in a pigment to binder weight ratio of about 0.5/100 to 300/100.
Generally, the pigments provide additional hiding and are usually the same as the
pigments of the base coating composition. Typical pigments that can be used are titanium
dioxide, other metallic oxides such as zinc oxide and iron oxide, carbon black, organic
pigments and dyes,metallic flake pigments such as aluminum flake,filler pigments,
silica, and the like. Preferably, the composition contains metallic flake pigments
such as aluminum flake. The pigments are formulated into a millbase using conventional
procedures and then the mill base is blending with the latex and the crosslinking
agent to form the guide coating composition.
[0018] The substrates over which the guide coat is applied are those conventionally used
for automotive and truck bodies such as cold roll steel, phosphatized steel, polyester
reinforced fiber glass, reaction injection molded urethanes, crystalline amorphous
polyamides and the like. Typically, these substrates are coated with alkyd resin,
epoxy resin or polyester primers.
[0019] After the primer is applied to the substrate and cured, the guide coating compositon
is applied. Any of the conventional methods of application can be used such as spraying
or electrostatic spraying. The coating is applied to provide a dry film thickness
of about 0.1 to 1.0 mils. The coating is then dried but not fully cured or crosslinked.
The base coating composition is applied by spraying or electrostatic spraying to provide
a dry film of about 0.2-1.5 mils thick. A clear coating composition is applied by
spraying or electrostatic spraying to a dry film thickness of about 0.5-6.0 mils.
The resulting multilayer finish then is baked at about 120-175°C for about 15 minutes
- 1 hour to form a glossy finish having excellent head-on-brightness and a good appearance.
[0020] The base coating composition can be any of the composition that are conventially
used such as acrylics or polyesters containing crosslinking agents. These compositions
can be solvent or water based solutions or dispersions. The process of this invention
is particularly useful for waterborne base coatings containing metallic flake pigments
and provides a finish with improved head-on-brightness. However, improvements are
noted also with the use of solvent based base coat finishes.
[0021] The clear coating composition can be a solvent or water based composition of an acrylic
or polyester polymer and containing a crosslinking agent or other type of composition
as are conventially used for clear coating compositions.
[0022] The guide coating composition also can be used with two component base coat/clear
coat compositions that do not require baking for curing such as two component acrylic
urethanes, acrylic esters, acrylic alkyds, epoxy esters and the like. These two component
compositions are used to refinish cars and trucks. Application of the guide coating
composition is the same as above and then the two component base coating composition
and clear coating composition are applied and cured at ambient temperatures or force
dried at elevated temperatures.
[0023] The following examples illustrate the invention. All parts and percentages are on
a weight bases unless otherwise indicated.
EXAMPLE
[0024] A latex was prepared by charging the following ingredients into a polymerization
vessel equipped with a stirrer and a heating source:
Portion 1 |
Parts By Weight |
Deionized water |
2535.0 |
Alkyl phenol ethylene oxide anionic surfactant |
16.4 |
Portion 2 |
|
Anionic surfactant (described above) |
23.4 |
Methyl methacrylate monomer |
369.0 |
Butyl methacrylate monmer |
1622.4 |
Deionized water |
2335.0 |
Portion 3 |
|
Deionized water |
225.0 |
Ammonium persulfate |
7.0 |
Portion 4 |
|
Deionized water |
1097.0 |
Anionic surfactant (described above) |
11.7 |
Methacrylic acid |
81.7 |
Hydroxy ethyl acrylate monmer |
116.8 |
Butyl acrylate monomer |
385.3 |
Portion 5 |
|
Deionized water |
85.0 |
Ammonium persulfate |
2.3 |
Portion 6 |
|
Deionized water |
451.0 |
Amino ethyl propanol |
60.7 |
|
"Cosan" 145 - latex preservative of an oxazolidine derivative made by Cosan Chemical
Corp. |
10.0 |
Total |
9434.6 |
[0025] Portion 1 is charged into the polymerization vessel and heated to about 83°C. Portion
2 is premixed. About 10% of Portion 2 is added and the resulting reaction mixture
is held at about 80°C. About 10% of Portion 3 is added and the reaction mixture is
held at the above temperature. The remainder of Portion 2 is added over a 60 minute
period along the about 72% of Portion 3 while controlling the reaction mixture at
about 85°C. The remainder of Portion 3 along with Portion 4 is added over a 30 minute
period while controlling the reaction mixture at 85°C. Portion 5 is added and the
reaction mixture is held at about 85°C for 60 minutes. Portion 6 is added over a 30
minute period and held at the above temperature for about 1 hour. The resulting latex
is cooled to room temperature and filtered.
[0026] The latex has a polymer solids content of 27.7% and a pH of 7.2. The polymer is comprised
of 14.3% methyl methacrylate, 78.0% butyl acrylate, 3.2% methacrylic acid, and 4.5%
hydroxy ethyl acrylate.
[0027] A mill base was prepared as follows:
|
Parts By Weight |
Ethylene glycol monobutyl ether |
55.13 |
Polyoxyethylene ester of mixed fatty acids and resins |
4.87 |
Aluminun flake paste - 65% solids aluminuN flake in mineral spirits |
40.00 |
Total |
100.00 |
[0028] The above constituents are charged into a mixing vessel and thoroughly mixed together.
[0029] The following guide coating compositions A-C were formulated:
COMPOSITION |
Parts By Weight |
|
A |
B |
C |
Latex (prepared above) |
1557.0 |
1557.0 |
1557.0 |
Deionized water |
488.0 |
1029.0 |
1029.0 |
|
Melamine formaldehyde resin solution (80% solids in isobutanol of a highly methylated
melamine formaldehyde resin having a low methylol content and containing alkoxy imino
groups) |
|
|
|
104.0 |
104.0 |
------ |
|
Mill base (prepared above) |
331.0 |
---- |
---- |
Deionized water |
541.0 |
---- |
---- |
Dimethyl ethanol amine |
23.4 |
23.4 |
23.4 |
"Acrysol" ASE 60 (Acrylic latex thickener) |
28.0 |
28.0 |
28.0 |
Total |
3072.4 |
2741.4 |
2637.4 |
[0030] Each of the above Guide Coating Compositions A-C were sprayed onto separate phosphatized
steel panels coated with an epoxy/polyester electrodeposition primer. Each composition
was sprayed onto four separate panels. One panel was dried at ambient temperature
of about 25°C for about 30 minutes; the second panel was baked for about 2 minutes
at about 104°C which was sufficient time to dry the coating but not cure the coating;
the third panel was baked for about 10 minutes at about 121°C which was sufficient
time to cure the coating and the fourth panel was baked for about 30 minutes at 121°C
which was sufficient to cure the coating. In each case the dried Guide Coating was
about 0.3 mils thick when dried.
[0031] A base coating was then applied by spraying a layer of above Composition A to each
of the above coated panels and the base coating was dried at ambient temperatures
for about 10 minutes to form a dried coating about 0.5 mils thick. Then a clear topcoating
was spray applied and the coated panels were baked for about 30 minutes at about 120°C
to form a clear coat/base coat finish.
[0032] The above clear coating composition has a solids content of about 68% in a 50/50
solvent mixture of methyl amyl ketone and aromatic hydrocarbon wherein the polymer
comprises styrene/butyl methacrylate/butyl acrylate/hydroxy ethyl acrylate/acrylic
acid in a ratio of about 14.9/28/30/25/2.1.
[0033] A control for each of the guide costs A - C of phosphatized primed steel panel was
prepared as above i.e., the panel was coated with the base coat and the clear coat
as above, except a guide coat was omitted. Each panel was baked under the same conditions.
These panels were used as the controls and represents prior art method of preparing
a clear coat/base coat finish.
[0034] The head on brightness was measured using the spectrophotometer described in Lee
et al. U.S. Patent 4,412,744 issued November 1, 1983 for each of the above prepared
panels and the results are as follows:
GUIDE COATING |
DRY AMBIENT TEMP/BAKE |
HEAD-ON-BRIGHTNESS |
NOTE |
CONTROL |
(NO GUIDE COATING) |
113 |
-- |
GUIDE COAT A |
30′ X AMB.TEMP. |
119 |
HIGHER HOB AND BETTER UNIFORMITY |
GUIDE COAT A |
2′ X 104°C |
120 |
" |
GUIDE COAT A |
10′ X 121°C |
112 |
SAME AS CONTROL |
GUIDE COAT A |
30′ X 121°C |
112 |
" |
GUIDE COATING |
DRY AMBIENT TEMP/BAKE |
HEAD-ON-BRIGHTNESS |
NOTE |
CONTROL |
(NO GUIDE COATING) |
114 |
-- |
GUIDE COAT B |
30′ X AMB.TEMP. |
122 |
HIGHER HOB AND BETTER UNIFORMITY |
GUIDE COAT B |
2′ X 104°C |
124 |
" |
GUIDE COAT B |
10′ X 121°C |
113 |
SAME AS CONTROL |
GUIDE COAT B |
30′ X 121°C |
115 |
" |
GUIDE COATING |
DRY AMBIENT TEMP/BAKE |
HEAD-ON-BRIGHTNESS |
NOTE |
CONTROL |
(NO GUIDE COATING) |
113 |
-- |
GUIDE COAT C |
30′ X AMB.TEMP. |
123 |
HIGHER HOB AND BETTER UNIFORMITY |
GUIDE COAT C |
2′ X 104°C |
122 |
" |
GUIDE COAT C |
10′ X 121°C |
120 |
" |
GUIDE COAT C |
30′ X 121°C |
120 |
" |
[0035] The above data shows that when no guide coating is used (control) head-on-brightness
is noticeably lower than with a guide coating. Also, when the guide coats A and B
are completely cured as occurs by baking for 10′at 121°C and for 30′ at 121°C, head-on-brightness
is substantially lower in comparison to only drying or partially curing the guide
coat.
[0036] With guide coating C which is the acrylic latex without a crosslinking agent curing
does not occur and the desirable improvement by use of this guide coat is noted at
all baking temperatures.
1. A process for applying a multilayer finish to a substrate having a primer layer,
the multi layer finish comprising a base coating composition layer and a layer of
a clear coating composition adhering to the base coating; characterized by;
applying a layer of a guide coating composition comprising an aqueous carrier and
a polymeric binder to the primer layer of the substrate and drying said composition
without crosslinking or curing said guide coating composition, applying a base coating
composition to the guide coating and a clear top coating composition to the base coating
and baking at elevated temperatures to cure fully the resulting multilayer finish.
2. A process according to claim 1 in which the guide coating composition comprises
a binder of a polymeric latex, and an aqueous carrier, and optionally a crosslinking
agent.
3. A process according to claim 2 in which the guide coating composition comprises
a binder of an acrylic polymer latex, an alkylated melamine formaldehyde crosslinking
agent, metallic flake pigments and an aqueous carrier.
4. A process according to claim 3 in which the acrylic polymer of the latex contains
hydroxyl and carboxyl groups.
5. A process according to claim 4 in which the acrylic polymer comprises an alkyl
methacrylate, an alkyl acrylate, a hydroxy alkyl acrylate or methacrylate and an ethylenically
unsaturated carboxylic acid.
6. A process according to claim 5 in which the acrylic polymer comprises methyl methacrylate,
butyl acrylate, hydroxy ethyl acrylate and methacrylic acid.
7. A process according to alcim 5 or 6 in which the acrylic polymer contains a difunctional
acrylate or methacrylate.
8. A process according to claim 7 in which the acrylic polymer contains allyl methacrylate.
9. A process according to any one of claims 1 to 8 in which the guide coating composition
is dried at about 20-185°C.
10. A process according to any one of claims 1 to 8 in which the guide coating composition
and the base coating composition are curable at ambient temperatures.
11. A process according to any one of claims 1 to 10 in which the guide coating composition
and the base coating composition are water-borne and the guide coating composition
and/or the base coating composition incorporate metallic flake pigments.
12. A guide coating composition comprising 10-75% by weight of binder and 25-90% by
weight of an aqueous carrier;
wherein the binder consists essentially of 60-95% by weight of a dispersed acrylic
polymer consisting essentially of about 10-20% by weight based on the weight of the
polymer of methyl methacrylate, 70-80% by weight, based on the weight of the polymer
of butyl acrylate, 2-9% by weight, based on the weight of the polymer of hydroxy ethyl
acrylate and 1-5% by weight based on the weight of the polymer of methacrylic acid;
5-40% by weight of an alkylated melamine formaldehyde resin and containing pigment
in a pigment to binder ratio 0.5/100 - 300/100.
13. A primer coated substrate having a cured multilayer finish comprising a layer
of the guide coating composition of claim 12 adhered to a primer coated substrate,
a pigmented base coating adhered to the guide coating composition and a clear top
layer adhered to the base coating.
14. A coated substrate according to claim 13 in which the guide coating has a thickness
of about 0.003 to 0.025 mm (0.1 - 1.0 mils), the base coating has a thickness of about
0.005 to 0.038 mm (0.2 - 1.5 mils) and the clear top coating has a thickness of about
0.013 to 0.152 mm (0.5 - 6 mils).