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Architectural Coating Additives

Additives for Interior Emulsion Paints: Thickeners, Defoamers, and Preservatives

·8 min read·
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The Additive Package in Interior Emulsion Paints

A typical interior emulsion paint contains 15–25 individual raw materials, but the performance — and the failure modes — are dominated by three additive categories: thickeners (rheology modifiers), defoamers, and preservatives. These three interact with each other and with the binder and pigment dispersion in ways that are rarely independent. A formulator who optimizes each in isolation will almost certainly encounter in-can problems, application defects, or premature spoilage.

This guide examines each category in detail, then addresses the critical interaction effects.


Thickeners for Interior Emulsion Paint

The Rheological Requirements

Interior emulsion paints must satisfy conflicting rheological demands across three shear rate regimes:

  • Low shear (storage, 0.01–1 s⁻¹): Sufficient yield stress to prevent pigment and filler settling and to provide a smooth, homogeneous in-can appearance. Target: Stormer KU 95–115 for premium grades.
  • Mid-shear (brush/roller application, 100–1000 s⁻¹): Low enough viscosity to transfer easily from brush or roller to wall. ICI viscosity target: 0.5–1.5 poise for brush grades.
  • High-shear recovery (post-application, 0.01–1 s⁻¹): Fast viscosity recovery to prevent sag on vertical surfaces before the water evaporates.

No single thickener chemistry satisfies all three requirements optimally. Production emulsion paints almost universally use a combination.

Hydroxyethyl Cellulose (HEC)

HEC is the most widely used thickener in interior emulsion paints, particularly in developing markets and volume-grade products. It is dissolved in water at 2–3% concentration to form a pre-gel, then incorporated into the grind phase.

Typical use level: 0.3–0.7% on total formulation weight (as dry HEC) KU contribution: ~5–10 KU per 0.1% HEC at MW 250,000 Viscosity grade selection: Medium-viscosity grades (e.g., 250M) for most architectural applications; low-viscosity grades for high-PVC flat paints

HEC provides excellent sag resistance and in-can stability but delivers a "heavy" brush feel and limited leveling. It is susceptible to microbial attack — HEC degradation (manifesting as sudden viscosity loss during storage) is the most common preservative failure mode in emulsion paint.

HASE Thickeners

HASE (Hydrophobically modified Alkali-Swellable Emulsions) are acrylic polymer emulsions that swell and develop viscosity upon neutralization to pH > 7.5. They are the preferred choice for premium architectural paints where leveling and gloss are priorities.

Typical use level: 0.2–0.4% active on formulation weight Addition sequence: Always add after pH adjustment to 8.5–9.0 with AMP-95 or ammonia KU contribution: ~8–15 KU per 0.1% active at typical formulation pH pH sensitivity: Viscosity drops rapidly below pH 7.5; check pH of final blend after adding all components

The main weakness of HASE is poor sag resistance on deep-color bases at high dilution. This is typically corrected by incorporating 0.2–0.3% HEC as a co-thickener.

HEUR Thickeners

HEUR (Hydrophobically modified Ethylene Oxide Urethane) thickeners provide the best sag resistance and high-shear viscosity profile of all thickener families. Their use in interior emulsion paints has grown as consumers demand roller-applied paints that do not spatter and do not sag.

Typical use level: 0.3–1.0% on formulation weight Critical parameter: HEUR efficiency is strongly dependent on the binder type and the surfactant content of the formulation. In formulations with high surfactant levels (> 1%), HEUR efficiency drops significantly because surfactant micelles compete with binder particles for HEUR end-group associations. Testing note: Measure HEUR-thickened paint viscosity after 24 hours, not immediately after mixing — full association equilibrium takes 12–24 hours.


Defoamers for Interior Emulsion Paints

The Foam Problem in Emulsion Paint

Interior emulsion paints are inherently foam-prone: they contain surfactants (from binder synthesis, dispersants, and wetting agents), they are mixed under shear during manufacturing, and they are applied by methods (roller, brush) that continuously entrain air. Uncontrolled foam causes:

  • In-can foam: Overfilling containers, difficult to pour without spillage
  • Application foam (macro-foam): Bubbles visible in wet film, pop marks in dry film
  • Micro-foam: Tiny air bubbles that don't pop, permanently reducing gloss and increasing haze in satin and semi-gloss grades

Two distinct defoamer functions are required:

  1. In-can (bulk) defoaming: Destroying large foam bubbles during manufacture and on opening the can
  2. Film defoaming: Collapsing micro-foam during application before the film skins over

These two requirements are not always met by the same defoamer.

Mineral Oil-Based Defoamers

Mineral oil defoamers (often compounded with hydrophobic silica) are the standard in commodity emulsion paints. They are cost-effective and compatible with most emulsion systems.

Mechanism: Hydrophobic oil droplets enter the foam lamella, destabilize the surfactant film, and cause lamella drainage and bubble coalescence. Typical dosage: 0.2–0.5% on formulation weight Limitation: May cause surface defects (craters, cloudiness) if overdosed, particularly in satin and gloss grades. Always run a drawdown test at 1.5× and 2× of the target dosage to confirm absence of cratering.

Silicone Defoamers

Silicone defoamers (polydimethylsiloxane emulsions, often modified with hydrophobic silica) are more efficient than mineral oil types, effective at lower dosages, and more compatible with modern emulsion systems.

Typical dosage: 0.05–0.2% on formulation weight (lower than mineral oil) Limitation: Risk of surface defects (fish-eyes, gloss reduction) is higher with silicone grades, particularly in high-gloss systems. Use the lowest effective dosage and validate inter-coat adhesion if the paint is to be overcoated.

Polymer Defoamers

Polymer-based defoamers (polyethylene wax dispersions, modified polyacrylate defoamers) are the preferred choice in premium flat and matte emulsion paints. They are film-forming — they incorporate into the paint film rather than remaining as discrete droplets — which eliminates the risk of film cloudiness and surface defects.

Typical dosage: 0.1–0.3% Best application: Flat and matte interior paints; low-gloss eggshell grades

Defoamer Selection Table

Defoamer TypeDosage RangeGloss RiskBest ApplicationCost Index
Mineral oil + silica0.2–0.5%Low–MediumFlat / Matt / Eggshell
Silicone emulsion0.05–0.2%Medium–HighFlat to Satin2–3×
Polymer (wax/polyacrylate)0.1–0.3%Very lowPremium flat, matte2–4×

Preservatives for Interior Emulsion Paints

In-Can Preservation vs. Dry-Film Preservation

These are two separate functions requiring separate biocide types:

In-can preservatives protect the liquid paint from bacterial and fungal spoilage during storage. The target organisms are gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria, yeasts, and molds that degrade HEC thickeners, consume surfactants, and generate CO₂ (pressure buildup in sealed cans) and acids (pH drop, destabilizing the emulsion).

Dry-film preservatives (mildewcides) protect the cured paint film on the wall from mold and algae growth. These are required in humid environments, kitchens, bathrooms, and exterior applications.

Common In-Can Biocide Technologies

BIT (1,2-Benzisothiazolin-3-one, CAS 2634-33-5): The most widely used in-can biocide in waterborne systems. Effective against bacteria and fungi. Typical dosage: 100–300 ppm active on total formulation weight. Classified as a skin sensitizer (Class 1A in EU) — compliance with EU Biocidal Products Regulation (BPR) Regulation 528/2012 is mandatory for EU market products.

MIT (Methylisothiazolinone, CAS 2682-20-4): Highly effective bactericide. Due to severe skin sensitization classification under EU CLP and recent EU restrictions (max 0.0015% in leave-on products), MIT use has been significantly restricted. Many EU-market formulas have transitioned to MIT-free systems.

OIT (Octylisothiazolinone, CAS 26530-20-1): Broad-spectrum biocide with activity against wood-rotting fungi. Used as a film preservative and in paints for humid environments. More lipophilic than BIT — distributes into organic phases. Dosage: 200–500 ppm.

CMIT/MIT combination (Kathon CG, 3:1 ratio): The classic preservation system for cosmetics and coatings. The regulatory environment has dramatically constrained permitted concentrations in leave-on and immersion applications. Verify current permitted levels for your specific market and application before use.

Preservation Failure and HEC Degradation

The most dramatic preservation failure in emulsion paint is sudden viscosity loss during storage — the paint becomes completely fluid within 2–4 weeks of manufacture. This is caused by bacterial enzymes (cellulases) that hydrolyze the HEC thickener. A single contamination event can propagate through an entire production batch and subsequently infect production equipment.

Prevention protocol:

  1. Use BIT at 200–300 ppm active in all HEC-containing formulations
  2. Verify raw water quality (use deionized or softened water; municipal tap water can carry bacterial load)
  3. Sanitize grinding and mixing equipment regularly
  4. Seal containers properly to prevent contamination during storage

Critical Additive Interactions

Defoamer–Thickener Interaction

Mineral oil and silicone defoamers can partially disrupt HEUR thickener associations, reducing thickener efficiency. In formulations using both HEUR and a silicone defoamer, viscosity must be measured after all components are fully incorporated and equilibrated. The combined effect often requires a higher HEUR dosage than expected from either component alone.

Biocide–pH Interaction

BIT and OIT biocides are most effective at pH 7.0–9.0. Above pH 9.5, hydrolysis of the isothiazolinone ring can occur, reducing biocidal efficacy. Many HASE-thickened formulations require pH 8.5–9.5 for thickener activation — this is compatible with isothiazolinone preservation. However, highly alkaline formulations (pH > 10, sometimes seen in cement-based products) require alternative preservation approaches.

Preservative–Wetting Agent Interaction

Certain wetting agents (particularly ethoxylated nonionic surfactants at high concentrations) can partially encapsulate biocide molecules in micelles, reducing the effective free biocide concentration below inhibitory levels. If high surfactant loading is unavoidable, increase biocide dosage by 20–30% above the standard level and validate efficacy with a challenge test.


Summary

A balanced additive package for interior emulsion paint combines HEC (0.3–0.5%) and HASE (0.2–0.3%) for rheology, a matched defoamer at the minimum effective dosage (0.1–0.3% depending on type), and BIT-based in-can preservation at 200–300 ppm. Additive interactions — particularly between HEUR and silicone defoamers, and between biocides and pH — must be verified at the final formulation level, not assessed from individual component data alone. Chemzip supplies HEC grades, HASE dispersions, mineral oil and polymer defoamers, and BIT/OIT biocides with full technical support for interior emulsion paint formulation.

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