PPG announced the installation of an advanced testing line for radiation-curable coatings at its R&D Center of Excellence in Marly, France.
The line can test multiple curing technologies, including infrared (IR), ultraviolet (UV), LED, excimer, arc lamps, and electron beam (EB). This investment allows the company to accurately replicate customer production conditions, helping accelerate development cycles and reduce the number of customer trials.
Unlike conventional thermal curing, radiation curing requires less energy because it operates at or near ambient temperature. This reduction in energy demand can significantly lower carbon emissions by 65%*, with further gains possible when powered by renewable energy sources. In addition, UV- and EB-curable systems typically use 100% solids formulations with no solvents, reducing or eliminating volatile organic compound emissions.
Beyond sustainability advantages, UV- and EB-based technologies deliver significant productivity gains, curing in seconds and allowing parts to be handled immediately for storage, packing, and shipping.
Mark Poland“Our deep expertise and broad capabilities in radiation curing set PPG apart and strengthen our position as a leader in energy-efficient finishing solutions,” says Mark Poland, PPG regional technical director, EMEA, Industrial Coatings. “This investment enables us to tailor finishing technologies to our customers’ specific lines, processes, and curing conditions, delivering measurable gains in performance and efficiency.”
Marly is a key R&D development hub within PPG’s global network, driving product innovation and technical support for customers in the automotive, general industrial, coil, extrusion, and specialty product sectors. The company also conducts research on radiation-curable technologies at its Coatings Innovation Center (CIC) near Pittsburgh and at several regional labs across the U.S., Europe, Australia, and China. These facilities feature stand-alone UV and EB curing units or fully integrated UV/EB lines to help customers develop, test, and validate energy-curable coatings, reducing energy use and improving production efficiency.
PPG recently installed a laser-curing pilot finishing line at its powder manufacturing and technical facility in Strongsville, Ohio, along with a laboratory-scale system for feasibility research at the CIC. This investment is intended to accelerate the large-scale commercialization of laser curing for powder coating technologies.
Visit https://www.ppg.com/en-US/industrialcoatings/energy-cure-uv-eb-coatings





