Polyurea Surface Preparation Standards: A Field Guide for Canadian Applicators

Surface preparation is the single most critical factor determining the long-term success of any polyurea coating project. In Canada’s harsh climate — with freeze-thaw cycles, high humidity, and extreme temperature swings — cutting corners on prep means coating failures that cost clients far more than the original application fee. This field guide consolidates the hard-won knowledge of CPCA members across the country into one practical reference.

Why Surface Preparation Matters More With Polyurea

Unlike slower-curing coatings, polyurea systems gel in seconds. You get one shot. Contamination, moisture, or mechanical weakness in the substrate that a slower coating might bridge over will instead become encapsulated beneath polyurea — and eventually cause delamination. Our Ask the Expert series consistently shows that over 70% of polyurea failures trace back to inadequate surface prep, not formulation issues.

For technical applicators looking to understand why chemistry matters so much here, see our companion article on polyurea chemistry for Canadian applicators.

The CPCA Standard Prep Protocol

CPCA’s Technical Committee, drawing from member experience and SSPC/NACE standards, recommends the following protocol for structural concrete applications:

Step 1: Substrate Evaluation

Before any mechanical prep, evaluate the substrate’s compressive strength (minimum 3,000 psi for most polyurea systems), surface pH (target 7–9 for cured concrete), and moisture content. Our detailed guide on substrate moisture testing covers the specific instruments and thresholds you need to know.

Pull-off adhesion testing should be performed after prep to confirm bond strength potential. Most CPCA member companies target a minimum 250 psi pull-off before spraying.

Step 2: Mechanical Preparation

Shot blasting to ICRI CSP 3–5 is the gold standard for structural applications like concrete rehabilitation projects and manhole lining work. For secondary containment or cistern lining applications, CSP 3 is generally acceptable.

Grinding may be substituted where shot blasting isn’t practical, but requires careful attention to achieving consistent profile depth. Diamond grinding creates a cleaner profile than cup grinding and is preferred for potable water applications.

Step 3: Crack and Joint Treatment

Active cracks must be stabilized before coating. Static cracks wider than 1/16″ should be routed and filled with a compatible semi-rigid or flexible epoxy. The flexibility of the fill material should be matched to the substrate’s expected movement — over-rigid fillers create stress risers that telegraph through the polyurea.

Step 4: Prime If Required

While aromatic polyurea systems often spray direct-to-concrete, porous or questionable substrates benefit greatly from epoxy primer. For potable water tanks and cisterns requiring NSF/ANSI 61 compliance (covered in our webinar recap on NSF compliance), primer selection must not break the certification chain.

Cold Weather Surface Preparation in Canada

Canadian winters present unique challenges. Surface temperature must be at least 5°C above dew point, and concrete that has been frozen and thawed repeatedly may have compromised surface tensile strength. Our article on spraying polyurea in cold weather provides a full discussion of environmental controls and equipment adjustments.

In practice, many experienced CPCA contractors use temporary enclosures with propane heat to extend their working season. This approach was highlighted in the CPCA Ontario Chapter June Technical Workshop, where members shared their cold-weather operations strategies.

Steel and Metal Substrates

For steel — common in mining sector applications — abrasive blast cleaning to SSPC-SP 6 minimum, SSPC-SP 10 for immersion service, is required. Surface profile of 50–75 microns (2–3 mils) Rz is the target range for direct-to-metal aromatic polyurea.

Flash rust must be addressed immediately before application. In coastal British Columbia and Atlantic Canada, high humidity means the window between blast and spray can be very short — often under four hours even with compressed air blowing across the surface.

Documentation and Quality Assurance

Proper documentation protects both the applicator and the client. CPCA members should be recording: ambient temperature and relative humidity (3 readings minimum per shift), surface temperature and dew point delta, surface pH, moisture meter readings, and pull-off adhesion test results with location mapping.

This documentation becomes invaluable if warranty claims arise. It also strengthens your position when bidding projects against competitors — the ability to demonstrate a documented QA process is a genuine differentiator, especially on municipal and industrial contracts.

Training and Certification

CPCA offers surface preparation certification as part of its Applicator Certification Program. The Quebec Chapter’s new partnership with CEGEP (see: French-language training program launch) includes surface preparation modules developed with direct industry input. Check the Events & Meetings Calendar for upcoming training dates in your province.

This article was reviewed by CPCA’s Technical Standards Committee. Members with questions or contributions are encouraged to submit to the Technical Resources section of the Member Directory.

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