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Product development for green productivity a case study Development of algae resistant surface coating for building fac

Product development for green productivity a case study Development of algae resistant surface coating for building facades in the humid tropics. 2 nd APO World Conference on GP Manila 9-12 Dec 2002 LOH Wah Sing Institute of High Performance Computing Singapore. Outline of presentation.

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Product development for green productivity a case study Development of algae resistant surface coating for building fac

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  1. Product development for green productivity a case studyDevelopment of algae resistant surface coating for building facades in the humid tropics 2nd APO World Conference on GP Manila 9-12 Dec 2002 LOH Wah Sing Institute of High Performance Computing Singapore

  2. Outline of presentation • Paint failure on painted building facades with respect to microbial fouling – site survey - pattern of fouling - algae vs. fungus • Causes of paint failure • Climate of tropics vs. sub-tropics • New paint quality attributes + environmental consideration • Screening of algal resistance in field • Full field test • New product standardisation • Implication of project to green productivity

  3. About Singapore • Urban island nation near the equator • Area : 660 sq km • Population : 4 million; 6000 people/sq km • 860,000 public apartments (Ave 70 sqm/unit) housing 3 million population • Mass construction of public housing by Housing and Development Board started from early 1960s

  4. General microbial fouling on building facades

  5. Finishing on building facades • Paint finish widely used on residential buildings • Problem of unsightly disfigurement of paint by microbial fouling became serious from 1970s • Microbial fouling on facades was caused by algae, not by fungus – latter advocated by paint manufacturers • Main fouling algal species : Trentepohlia odorata • Conventional emulsion paint short lived – 3 yrs • Frequent repainting caused social disruption for urban living • HDB tried solvent-based paint for repainting fobs from early 1980s – emission of 900 tons of solvent per year

  6. Fouling on porous surface (right)

  7. Microbial growth along cracks

  8. Algae - Growth on both inorganic and organic substrate - Photosynthesis capability, presence of chlorophyll Fungus - Live on organic substrate as source of food

  9. Causes of paint failure • Climatic stress – temperature, humidity, rainfall, UV radiation • Detailing of buildings – consider tropical features? • Quality of substrate – porosity • Quality of paint • Painting specification • Painting workmanship

  10. Climate - Singapore vs. MiamiSingapore: 103 oE, 1 oNMiami : 80 oW, 26 oN

  11. Climate - Singapore vs. MiamiSingapore: 103 oE, 1 oNMiami : 80 oW, 26 oN

  12. Climate - Singapore vs. MiamiSingapore: 103 oE, 1 oNMiami : 80 oW, 26 oN

  13. Climate – solar radiation • A Davis & D Sims, “Weathering of polymers” (1983), Applied Science Publishers • L.R. Koller, “Ultraviolet radiation”(1965), Wiley • Total solar radiation shows maximum intensity at latitude 15 deg • Solar UV radiation shows * max intensity at equator, decreases with increasing latitude * max intensity at noon of day * max intensity in summer of year • Combination of UV and moisture (humidity) accelerates degradation (S.P. Pappas, “Weathering of coatings – formulation and evaluation” (1989), Prog in Organic Coatings, vol 17, No.2, pg89)

  14. Product development – attributes considered • Cost effectiveness • Service life of 6 years or more under humid tropical climate • Environmental consideration – water-based paint to be developed • Rule 66, smog, VOCs, fire & health hazards etc • Formulation for weather durability – binder/pigment ratio, type of binder, biocides, additives * High pigmentation level causes chalking/erosion * Binder susceptible to moisture and alkali will not last * Hygroscopic additives will affect moisture sensitivity of paint * Low pigmentation characterised by appearance of sheen on dry paint surface

  15. Weathering test – crack-present and crack-free quality

  16. Screening test against algal resistance at field

  17. Screening against algal resistance at field

  18. Field test on 8 buildings for 8 yrs; Example – Changi Telecoms Building

  19. Field test – algal growth on glass window due to condensation

  20. Product standardisation – for purchasing specification NR: not required

  21. Life cycle costing

  22. Impacts and benefits • Product commercialisation * 11(14) paint manufacturers in S’pore * Adopted in Brunei and Hong Kong • Changing marketing concept of paint * Partnership of paint manufacturers and painters * Sell paint (semi-product)  sell paintwork (finished product) • Cost effectiveness * Extended service life  longer repainting cycle * Life cycle costing  savings of S$2 million/year • Green productivity * Waste reduction  savings of labour (paint production and painting), scaffolding, water, paint materials, logistics and administration…. * VOCs elimination  savings of 900 tons solvent/year * Reduced ESH impact

  23. Thank you

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