Electropolishing Basics |
| Commercial applications for electropolishing have been in use since the early 1950's. Most formal research on the process occurred at that time, motivated by the growth and sophistication in electroplating technology. Today there are about 500 industrial installations nationwide, and perhaps several dozen electropolishing job shops. |
| Electropolishing is often referred to as a "reverse plating" process. Electrochemical in nature, electropolishing uses a combination of rectified current and a blended chemical electrolyte bath to remove flaws from the surface of a metal part. |
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| While the process is best known for the bright polish left on a surface, there are some important, often overlooked benefits of this metal removal method. These benefits include deburring, size control, microfinish improvement and others. These metal improvement benefits offer great promise to design and production engineers for cost savings and product improvement |
| Although the process is roughly 55 years old, substantial refinements have taken place. Many electrolytes have been developed to allow for electropolishing of a broad range of metals. These newer electrolytes, together with advanced parts handling techniques have combined to improve production yields on a wide range of metal products. |
| Want To Learn More? |
Download our electropolishing workbook.
It provides an in depth look at solutions to metal surface problems. |
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| View our most popular case histories. |
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| World's Largest Electropolishing DataBank |
| We process literally 10,000 different parts for companies worldwide, and have assembled a unique database of case histories for your review. |
| You will be plugged into our plant with up to the minute access to all types of metal surfaces problems/solutions, for a huge range of industries. Our files are printable on your local printer, ready for review by your production team. You may access our database through our |
| Learning Center. |
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