What are common electroplating mistakes?

Common electroplating mistakes include poor surface cleaning, incorrect current settings, and improper chemical balance in the plating bath.
These issues can cause uneven coating, peeling, burning, discoloration, or weak adhesion on the metal surface.
Regular bath maintenance, proper preparation, and controlled operating conditions help achieve quality plating results.



Electroplating failures usually come from problems in:

  • surface preparation,
  • bath chemistry,
  • current control,
  • contamination,
  • rinsing,
  • temperature,
  • or handling.

Even small mistakes can produce:

  • peeling,
  • burning,
  • roughness,
  • pitting,
  • discoloration,
  • weak adhesion,
  • corrosion failure.

Major Categories of Electroplating Mistakes

CategoryTypical Problems
Surface preparationPoor adhesion
Bath chemistryRough/dull deposits
Electrical controlBurning/thin plating
ContaminationPits/stains
RinsingCross-contamination
Temperature controlBrittle deposits
Agitation problemsUneven thickness
Anode issuesSludge/instability
Handling/storageCorrosion/damage

1. Poor Surface Cleaning (Most Common Failure)

The Mistake

Plating onto dirty surfaces.

Contaminants include:

  • oil,
  • grease,
  • fingerprints,
  • polishing compounds,
  • oxides,
  • rust.

Even microscopic contamination can ruin adhesion.


What Happens

The plating may:

  • blister,
  • peel,
  • flake,
  • bubble,
  • crack.

The metal deposits onto dirt instead of the base metal.


Why It Happens

Electroplating requires:

Atomic bonding

Contamination blocks direct metallic contact.


Prevention

Use proper:

  • degreasing,
  • alkaline cleaning,
  • acid activation,
  • rinsing.

Common cleaners:

  • Sodium hydroxide
  • surfactants
  • solvent cleaners

2. Inadequate Rinsing

The Mistake

Not rinsing between process tanks.

Example:

  • acid dragged into alkaline bath,
  • cyanide carried into acid tank,
  • chromium contamination entering nickel bath.

Effects

  • bath contamination
  • stains
  • rough deposits
  • reduced bath life
  • dangerous reactions

Critical hazard:
acid + cyanide can form:


Prevention

  • multiple rinse tanks
  • counterflow rinsing
  • conductivity monitoring
  • spray rinses

3. Wrong Current Density

The Mistake

Using too much or too little current.

Current density:

  • current per unit surface area

Measured in:

  • A/dm²
  • A/ft²

Too High Current

Causes:

  • burning,
  • rough deposits,
  • dark edges,
  • dendrites.

Metal deposits too fast.


Too Low Current

Causes:

  • dull plating,
  • poor coverage,
  • weak adhesion,
  • thin deposits.

Why It Happens

Metal deposition rate follows:

Faraday’s laws of electrolysis

More current:

  • faster deposition,
    but excessive current destabilizes crystal growth.

Prevention

Use proper:

  • rectifier settings,
  • current calculations,
  • rack design.

4. Poor Anode-to-Cathode Geometry

The Mistake

Incorrect spacing or positioning.


Effects

Uneven plating thickness:

  • thick edges,
  • thin recesses,
  • shadowing,
  • burning near edges.

Electric field concentration causes localized overplating.


Prevention

Use:

  • auxiliary anodes,
  • shields,
  • robbers,
  • proper jig design.

5. Incorrect Bath Chemistry

The Mistake

Wrong:

  • metal concentration,
  • pH,
  • additives,
  • conductivity,
  • acid content.

Effects

  • roughness,
  • brittleness,
  • low brightness,
  • poor adhesion,
  • low efficiency.

Example

Low nickel concentration in:

Nickel sulfate

bath can cause:

  • poor coverage,
  • burning.

Prevention

Regular chemical analysis:

  • titration,
  • Hull cell testing,
  • spectroscopy.

6. Poor pH Control

The Mistake

Bath pH drifts outside operating range.


Effects

Low pH

  • hydrogen evolution,
  • brittleness,
  • burning.

High pH

  • metal precipitation,
  • cloudy baths,
  • rough plating.

Prevention

Continuous pH monitoring.


7. Temperature Control Problems

The Mistake

Operating bath too hot or too cold.


Effects

Too Hot

  • soft deposits,
  • additive breakdown,
  • faster contamination.

Too Cold

  • poor conductivity,
  • slow deposition,
  • dull finish.

Example

Hard chromium plating is highly temperature sensitive.

Using:

Chromic acid

Small temperature shifts strongly affect:

  • hardness,
  • crack structure,
  • efficiency.

8. Contaminated Plating Bath

The Mistake

Allowing impurities into bath.

Sources:

  • dirty parts,
  • poor rinsing,
  • dissolving fixtures,
  • airborne dust,
  • impure chemicals.

Effects

  • pitting,
  • stains,
  • roughness,
  • poor brightness,
  • nodules.

Common Contaminants

ContaminantSource
IronCorroding equipment
CopperDrag-in
ChloridesWater contamination
OrganicsOils/additives
ParticulatesDust/sludge

Prevention

Use:

  • filtration,
  • carbon treatment,
  • purified water,
  • regular maintenance.

9. Hydrogen Embrittlement

The Mistake

Ignoring absorbed hydrogen during plating.

Most severe in:

  • high-strength steels.

What Happens

Hydrogen enters metal lattice causing:

  • cracking,
  • delayed fracture,
  • catastrophic failure.

Affected industries:

  • aerospace
  • automotive
  • military

Common During

  • cadmium plating
  • zinc plating
  • acid cleaning

Prevention

Post-plating baking:

  • typically 190–230°C

Hydrogen diffuses out.


10. Overplating or Excess Thickness

The Mistake

Applying too much metal.


Effects

  • cracking,
  • stress,
  • peeling,
  • dimensional inaccuracies.

Example

Excess chromium plating may crack because chromium is brittle.


Prevention

Control plating time using:

Faraday’s laws of electrolysis


11. Underplating

The Mistake

Deposit too thin.


Effects

  • poor corrosion resistance,
  • rapid wear,
  • premature failure.

Common Cause

Incorrect plating time calculations.


12. Poor Agitation

The Mistake

Insufficient solution movement.


Effects

  • uneven ion concentration,
  • pitting,
  • burning,
  • dull deposits.

Why

Ion depletion occurs near surface.

Agitation replenishes metal ions.


Prevention

Use:

  • air agitation,
  • pump circulation,
  • cathode movement.

13. Wrong Base Metal Preparation

The Mistake

Plating directly onto incompatible metals.


Example

Nickel directly onto zinc die casting may fail.

Often requires:

  • copper strike,
  • nickel strike,
  • activation layer.

14. Improper Rack Contact

The Mistake

Poor electrical connection to workpiece.


Effects

  • no plating,
  • intermittent deposition,
  • arcing,
  • burning.

Prevention

Clean rack contacts regularly.


15. Using Incorrect Water Quality

The Mistake

Using hard or contaminated water.


Effects

  • mineral contamination,
  • stains,
  • precipitation,
  • cloudy deposits.

Prevention

Use:

  • deionized water,
  • reverse osmosis water.

16. Ignoring Safety Procedures

The Mistake

Improper handling of plating chemicals.

Dangerous chemicals include:

  • Hexavalent chromium
  • Sodium cyanide
  • Sulfuric acid

Risks

  • chemical burns,
  • toxic gas,
  • cancer risk,
  • explosions,
  • environmental contamination.

17. Incorrect Pretreatment for Aluminum

The Mistake

Plating aluminum without proper zincating.

Aluminum rapidly forms oxide:

Passivation

This blocks adhesion.


Prevention

Use:

  • zincate process,
  • double zincate,
  • activation steps.

18. Skipping Stress Relief

Some plated deposits contain internal stress.

Skipping treatment can cause:

  • cracking,
  • peeling,
  • warping.

19. Excess Organic Additives

Brighteners and leveling agents are useful but overuse causes:

  • brittleness,
  • haze,
  • poor solderability,
  • burning.

20. Poor Filtration

Suspended particles create:

  • pits,
  • nodules,
  • rough texture.

Continuous filtration is essential for high-quality decorative plating.


Common Electroplating Defects and Causes

DefectCommon Cause
PeelingPoor cleaning
BurningExcess current
PittingContamination
RoughnessDirty bath
Dull finishLow additives/current
BlisteringOil contamination
CrackingExcess stress/thickness
Thin areasPoor geometry
Dark edgesHigh current density
Poor adhesionOxides/contamination

Most Serious Industrial Mistakes

The highest-risk failures are:

  1. cyanide-acid mixing,
  2. hydrogen embrittlement,
  3. hexavalent chromium exposure,
  4. improper wastewater disposal,
  5. poor adhesion on critical aerospace parts.

These can cause:

  • fatalities,
  • environmental disasters,
  • structural failures.

Summary

The most common electroplating mistakes involve:

  • inadequate cleaning,
  • poor rinsing,
  • incorrect current density,
  • contaminated baths,
  • bad pH/temperature control,
  • poor electrical contact,
  • insufficient agitation,
  • and improper chemical handling.

Successful electroplating requires precise control of:

  • chemistry,
  • electricity,
  • cleanliness,
  • temperature,
  • and process timing.

Other courses:

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow by Email
Pinterest
fb-share-icon
WhatsApp
Scroll to Top