Let a brief chemistry lesson ease your
fears.
By Thomas H. BachTo discuss high-speed burnishing programs, you must first understand the
chemistry of floor finishes used in these programs. Acrylic floor finishes and
their inherent properties are designed around three major ingredients: polymer,
wax and plasticizers.
The polymer is the most important part of
the finish. Wear and maintenance properties -- which include gloss, hardness,
durability, removability, slip-resistance, and resistance to scuffing, black
marks, powdering, soil, detergents and water -- are a function of the base
polymer.
All the remaining chemicals added to
floor-finish formulations are used to modify inherent polymer properties, but
the base properties desired are determined by the polymer selection. The second
major component in floor finish is another polymer, called "wax." Like
the base polymer, wax is synthetic, but it is different in composition from the
original polymer.
The function of wax in a floor finish is
to provide desired buffability. The higher the wax content, the more buffable
the finish. However, too much wax makes the finish soft and more susceptible to
scuffing and dirt pick-up.
Plasticizers can sometimes be solvents
which assist in film formation, and evaporate as the film dries. Other
plasticizers remain within the film during its life to provide resiliency.
Various combinations of these ingredients are responsible for the performance
properties of floor finishes that we use today. Keep this in mind as we
look at fact and fiction in high-speed burnishing programs.
Fiction
Floor finishes used in high-speed programs must be "thermoplastic" in
composition.
Fact
All floor finish films are thermoplastic. Thermoplastic is simply a term that
defines a material that will flow, deform or become "plastic" when
heated. This material can differ in its toughness, hardness and melting or
softening point. Thermoplastic materials include everything from steel, glass
and Plexiglas, to butter and floor finishes.
Fiction
High-speed burnishing causes a meltdown of the layers of finish.
Fact
High-speed burnishing is nothing more than controlled scratching that results in
physically removing or abrasively smoothing the top wear-surfaces of floor
finish. This smoothing causes increased floor gloss.
If your crew employs a high-speed
burnishing program, you may want five or six coats of finish to be applied to
floors for two reasons:
* Successive coats of finish will dampen
out the irregularities of floor tile, especially after stripping.
* Because burnishing abrasively removes
the film, you run the risk of prematurely damaging or wearing out floor tile
without applying an adequate number of coats of finish. Multiple coats of finish
result in a smooth surface that reflects light in an ordered, regular pattern to
create high gloss.
Fiction
Difficulty in removing finish from a floor, or stripping, is caused by
high-speed burnishing.
Fact
All finishes lose some of their removability as they age. The difficulty in
removing high-speed-maintained finish films is often due to the amount of time
the finish was on the floor, and not from any physical or chemical changes which
take place when the finish is burnished.
Because removability only gets harder
with time, it is important that finishes used in a high-speed maintenance
program start out with excellent removability features.
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