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How to Choose the Right Surface Treatment for Your Metal Parts

A comprehensive technical guide to selecting metal surface treatments — from anodizing and plating to powder coating and blasting — with roughness data, coating thickness specs, and application matching.

Surface TreatmentAnodizingPlatingPowder CoatingManufacturing Guide

Introduction

Surface treatment is often the deciding factor between a metal part that lasts years and one that fails prematurely. Whether you need corrosion resistance for marine components, wear hardness for automotive gears, or a decorative finish for consumer products, choosing the right surface treatment directly impacts performance, cost, and service life.

With dozens of available processes — from mechanical blasting to electrochemical plating to vacuum coating — engineers face a complex decision matrix. This guide breaks down the most common surface treatments with specific data on achievable roughness, coating thickness, and hardness, helping you match the right process to your application.

Start by exploring our [complete Surface Treatment overview](/surface-treatment) for a full catalog of available processes.

Key Factors in Surface Treatment Selection

Before choosing a treatment, define three primary requirements: **functional need** (corrosion resistance, wear protection, electrical conductivity), **material compatibility** (aluminum vs. steel vs. zinc), and **tolerance constraints** (treatments add measurable thickness that affects fit).

Common surface treatments can add 5–150μm of material thickness, which must be accounted for in tight-tolerance assemblies. Dimensional change after coating ranges from negligible for anodizing (5–25μm growth) to significant for hard chrome plating (25–500μm).

Mechanical Surface Treatments: Blasting, Grinding & Polishing

Mechanical treatments modify surface roughness and remove defects without changing the substrate chemistry. **Abrasive blasting** (glass bead, aluminum oxide, or steel shot) achieves Ra 0.8–6.3μm depending on media size and pressure, ideal for surface preparation before painting or coating.

**Grinding and polishing** reduce surface roughness to Ra 0.1–0.8μm for mirror finishes. Electropolishing — an electrochemical process — can achieve Ra < 0.1μm on stainless steel, simultaneously removing a 10–30μm surface layer to eliminate micro-cracks and embedded contaminants.

  • Shot peening:: Imparts compressive residual stress (400–800 MPa) at depths of 0.1–0.5mm, dramatically improving fatigue life of springs, shafts, and gears
  • Glass bead blasting:: Produces uniform satin finish at Ra 1.6–4.0μm with no material removal
  • Chemical Conversion Coatings: Anodizing & Passivation

    Chemical conversion treatments create a thin protective layer through controlled oxidation. **Anodizing** (primarily for aluminum) grows a porous aluminum oxide layer 5–25μm thick (Type II, decorative) or 25–150μm thick (Type III, hard anodizing). Hard anodized coatings achieve microhardness of 300–500 HV, approaching that of hardened tool steel.

    **Passivation** for stainless steel removes free iron from the surface, forming a chromium-oxide layer 1–5nm thick. While nearly invisible, this nanoscale layer restores corrosion resistance to Grade 304 and 316 stainless after machining or welding.

  • Anodizing (Type II):: 5–25μm, Ra 0.4–1.0μm, dyeable in multiple colors
  • Hard anodizing (Type III):: 25–150μm, Ra 0.8–1.6μm, 300–500 HV hardness
  • Phosphating:: 2–15μm, excellent paint base for automotive underbody components
  • Chromate conversion:: 0.5–2μm, standard for aluminum corrosion protection (RoHS-compliant trivalent versions available)
  • Electroplating & Organic Coatings: Zn, Ni, Cr & Powder Coating

    Electroplating deposits a metallic layer through electrolytic reduction. **Zinc plating** (5–20μm) is the most cost-effective corrosion protection for steel, with white rust appearing after 72–240 hours in salt spray testing depending on passivation type. **Nickel plating** (10–50μm) provides 500–800 HV hardness with excellent wear resistance.

    **Hard chrome plating** (25–500μm, 800–1100 HV) is the gold standard for hydraulic rods, molds, and wear surfaces, though environmental regulations increasingly favor HVOF (High-Velocity Oxygen Fuel) thermal spray as an alternative.

    **Powder coating** applies 60–300μm of thermoset polymer cured at 180–200°C, delivering salt spray resistance of 500–1000+ hours. It offers superior impact and UV resistance compared to liquid paint at competitive cost for large volumes.

    Surface Treatment Comparison Table

    Treatment │ Thickness (μm) │ Surface Roughness Ra (μm) │ Hardness (HV) │ Corrosion Resistance (Salt Spray) │ Typical Cost Factor

    |-----------|----------------|---------------------------|---------------|----------------------------------|---------------------|

    Glass Bead Blasting │ 0 (material removal) │ 1.6–4.0 │ N/A │ Moderate (with paint) │ $

    Electropolishing │ removes 10–30 │ < 0.1 │ N/A │ Excellent (316 SS) │ $$

    Anodizing (Type II) │ 5–25 │ 0.4–1.0 │ 200–300 │ 500–2000 hrs │ $$

    Hard Anodizing (Type III) │ 25–150 │ 0.8–1.6 │ 300–500 │ 1000–4000 hrs │ $$$

    Zinc Plating │ 5–20 │ 0.8–3.2 │ 100–200 │ 72–240 hrs │ $

    Nickel Plating │ 10–50 │ 0.2–0.8 │ 500–800 │ 500–1500 hrs │ $$

    Hard Chrome Plating │ 25–500 │ 0.1–0.4 │ 800–1100 │ 1000–3000 hrs │ $$$

    Powder Coating │ 60–300 │ 1.6–6.3 │ N/A │ 500–1000+ hrs │ $$

    HVOF Thermal Spray │ 100–500 │ 1.0–3.0 │ 700–1200 │ 2000–5000+ hrs │ $$$$

    How to Match Treatment to Your Application

  • Corrosion-critical components: (marine, outdoor, chemical processing): Hard anodizing for aluminum (Type III, 50μm+), hot-dip galvanizing or zinc-nickel plating for steel. Target >500 hrs salt spray resistance.
  • Wear-resistant surfaces: (hydraulic cylinders, molds, tooling): Hard chrome plating (800–1100 HV) or HVOF thermal spray (700–1200 HV). Minimum coating thickness 50μm for moderate wear, 200μm+ for heavy-duty applications.
  • Aesthetic/decorative finishes: (consumer electronics, architectural hardware): Type II anodizing with dye (5–25μm) for aluminum, satin nickel plating (10–30μm) for steel, or powder coating in custom RAL colors.
  • Electrical/thermal conductivity: (bus bars, heat sinks, connectors): Silver plating (5–20μm) for maximum conductivity (1.59 μΩ·cm), tin plating (5–15μm) for solderable surfaces.
  • FDA/USP food contact: (processing equipment, cutlery): Electropolishing of 316L stainless steel (Ra < 0.5μm), eliminating surface crevices where bacteria can harbor.
  • Surface Preparation: The Critical First Step

    No surface treatment performs as specified without proper preparation. ISO 8501 and ASTM D2200 define four preparation grades: hand cleaning (St2), power-tool cleaning (St3), commercial blast (Sa2), and near-white blast (Sa2.5). For high-performance coatings, **Sa2.5 (near-white metal blast)** is the minimum requirement, achieving 95% surface cleanliness and a 50–100μm anchor profile for mechanical adhesion.

    A common mistake is specifying an expensive topcoat on poorly prepared surfaces — salt spray performance can drop by 60–80% when surface cleanliness falls below Sa2.

    Conclusion

    Selecting the right surface treatment is a multi-variable engineering decision balancing corrosion resistance, wear performance, dimensional tolerance, and cost. For aluminum parts, anodizing typically offers the best value-to-performance ratio. For steel components, zinc plating or powder coating covers most general-purpose needs, while hard chrome or HVOF serves demanding wear applications.

    MetalBizz offers 20+ surface treatment processes under one roof, from mechanical blasting and anodizing to electroplating and powder coating. Our engineers provide DFM feedback within 24 hours, including surface treatment recommendations. Visit our [Surface Treatment page](/surface-treatment) for a complete process catalog, or upload your drawings for a free quotation.

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