Corrosion Protection Options and Requirements for Steel Structures

Steel buildings are widely used in industrial plants, warehouses, and commercial facilities. Effective corrosion protection is critical to ensuring long-term durability, structural safety, and reduced lifecycle maintenance costs. A well-designed protection system helps customers achieve higher ROI and long-lasting performance.

1. Importance of Corrosion Protection

Steel is vulnerable to rust in humid, chemical, salt-spray, or polluted environments. Proper corrosion protection ensures structural reliability for 10–30+ years and prevents section loss or structural degradation.

2. Major Types of Corrosion Protection

1) Hot-Dip Galvanizing (HDG)
  • Suitable for medium to severe environments such as coastlines or chemical zones.
  • Provides uniform and long-lasting zinc coating (service life up to 30+ years).
  • Common standards: ASTM A123, ASTM A153, ASTM A780.
2) Protective Coating Systems

Used for large steel members and projects requiring higher durability.
Typical system includes:

  • Epoxy primer: strong adhesion and corrosion resistance.
  • Intermediate coat: e.g., epoxy micaceous iron oxide.
  • Top coat: weather-resistant polyurethanes or fluorocarbon coatings.

Standards referenced:

  • SSPC surface preparation grades
  • ASTM D-series coating test methods
  • AISC steel protection specifications
3) Thermal Metal Spraying (Metalizing)
  • Uses zinc, aluminum, or Zn-Al alloy.
  • Provides exceptional durability in extreme salt-spray environments.

3. Requirements in Design Drawings and Specifications

In international projects, corrosion protection must be clearly stated:

  1. Environmental category
    Based on ISO 12944 or AISC (C2–C5, CX, etc.).
  2. Coating system specification
    Material type, thickness (DFT), and approved manufacturers.
  3. Surface preparation requirements
    Sa2.5 / SSPC-SP10, surface roughness, weld cleaning, oil removal.
  4. Quality inspection criteria
    DFT testing, adhesion test, holiday detection, zinc content, etc.
  5. Maintenance schedule
    Recommended inspection every 5–10 years.

4. Customer Value

  • Extends building lifespan by 2–3 times
  • Reduces maintenance and downtime
  • Improves safety
  • Fully compliant with U.S. and international standards (ASTM, AISC, ISO)