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Tagnite
Coating for Magnesium Alloy
Description
And Advantages
The Tagnite coating is the most corrosion
and abrasion resistant anodic coating available for magnesium
alloys. The Tagnite coating is formed in an electrolytic cell
and is classified as an anodize coating. The coating was designed
as a replacement for the Dow 17 and HAE anodize coatings which
were invented in the mid 1940's. These two coatings lack the
properties needed in today's demanding aerospace and defense
industries. Like typical anodize coatings, the part to be
coated is connected to a conductive rack which carries the
part throughout the coating process. Once placed in the Tagnite
coating tank, the rack and part become the anode and the tank
holding the electrolyte serves as the cathode.
The electrolyte used to form the coating
is an alkaline solution clear in color, containing no chromium
(VI) or other heavy metals and operates below room temperature
(40o to 60o F). This contrasts sharply
with the Dow 17 electrolyte, a chromic acid based electrolyte
containing a significant amount of chromium (VI), operating
between 160o and 180o F and is dark
orange in color. The HAE electrolyte (dark purple in color)
contains permanganate, an oxide form of the manganese metal,
and is a heavy metal similar to chromium.
The rectifier used to apply Tagnite was
designed specifically for the coating. It employs a unique
waveform optimized for the coating process. To ensure maximum
corrosion resistance and high dielectric strength, the Tagnite
coating is applied at voltages exceeding 300 volts DC. The
Dow 17 coating may be applied with AC or DC power and typically
does not exceed 100 volts. HAE is applied using AC current
and typically does not exceed 125 volts.
Unlike Dow 17 and HAE anodize which primarily
build thickness by surface deposition resulting in large pores
and a softer coating, Tagnite is formed by the build up of
hard, tightly packed magnesium oxide from the base of the
coating. The coating consists mostly of hard magnesium oxide
with minor surface deposition of hard fused silicates.
The Tagnite coating can be applied as
thin as 0.10 mil or as thick as 0.9 mil depending upon the
alloy being coated. The white color of the TAGNITE coating
does not vary with coating thickness, a clear demonstration
that the coating is primarily hard white magnesium oxide.
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