The PFAS Challenge in Waterborne Coatings
Waterborne coatings inherently have high surface tension (~45–72 mN/m), making substrate wetting the #1 formulation challenge. Traditional fluorosurfactants (C8-based PFOA/PFOS) were the gold standard — but they're now banned globally.
Current Regulatory Landscape (2026)
| Regulation | Scope | Status |
|---|---|---|
| EU REACH Annex XVII | PFOA + C9-C14 PFCA banned | In force since 2020 |
| EU Universal PFAS Restriction | Proposed ban on ALL PFAS | Under review, expected 2027–2028 |
| US EPA TSCA | PFOA/PFOS + 5 other PFAS | Banned 2024 |
| Canada CEPA | PFOA/PFOS prohibited | In force |
Solutions Hierarchy
- Fluorinated polyacrylate — polymeric, PFAS-exempt, best long-term regulatory safety
- C6 short-chain fluorosurfactant — excellent performance, legal today, watch EU universal ban
- Silicone polyether — non-fluorine, good wetting but higher surface tension (~22 mN/m)
- Modified acetylenic diol — Dynol/Surfynol type, fully non-fluorine
Performance Comparison
| Additive Type | Surface Tension Achieved | Substrate Wetting (oily metal) | PFAS Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| C6 anionic fluorosurfactant | 16–18 mN/m | ★★★★★ | Legal, under watch |
| Fluorinated polyacrylate | 20–24 mN/m | ★★★★ | Exempt |
| Silicone polyether | 22–25 mN/m | ★★★ | Non-PFAS |
| Acetylenic diol | 28–32 mN/m | ★★ | Non-PFAS |
For most waterborne industrial coatings, C6 fluorosurfactant at 0.05–0.1% remains the best balance of performance and regulatory safety. For markets anticipating EU universal PFAS ban, transition to fluorinated polyacrylate now.
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