Experts in Humidity & Moisture Control

3A SUPERSIV® Powder – CO2 Bubbles in Polyurethane Paint – Zeolite discussions

CO2 Bubbles in Polyurethane Paint

Author: Saul Edwards

If you are trying to remove CO2 bubbles from Polyurethane paint, then you will need to use a Zeolite Powder or a Zeolite Paste, such as 3A SUPERSIV Powder.

3A SUPERSIV Powder removes water from within your solvent-based 2-component Polyurethane formulation, and therefore stops the carbon dioxide bubbles from forming in the first place – so your problem is solved !

To receive a free sample of 3A SUPERSIV Powder, then please click on the link here

For further information about this topic or any other ancillary topic, then please click on the Expert Advisor buttons below, and one of our team will be very happy to help you

Alternatively, for further reading then please click one of the topics listed below:
What is molecular sieve?
Polyurethane finish problems
Molecular sieves for water removal

Need Help with this Topic?

…get in touch with the author

Share these insights with your friends to help them...

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Expert 2

Need Help on this Topic?

Please leave your contact information below, and one of our team experts will be very happy to help you!

Got a Question?

…then check our Frequently Asked Questions section

What Our Customers Say…

5/5
“Dear Saul! It has always been a pleasure to work with you! Thanks for your positivity!”
- E. Ostraukhova, Slovakia
5/5
“Baltimore is by far the best supplier we have for customer service,  and I would whole-heartedly recommend you to anyone!”
- J. Dawson, UK
4/5
“Courtesy and efficiency of the staff, prompt reply, exhaustive answers...”
- F. Cantoni, Italy
5/5
“Prompt response, assisting on time with delivery of goods, professional service...”
- A. Salman, UK
5/5
“Good customer service.
Good products off the shelf and speedy delivery...”
- J. Dunbar, UK
4/5
“When we send an email, we get a quick reply. We feel that Baltimore are genuinely interested in solving all quality issues we might ask about...”
- A. Bjune, Norway