Professional cleaning of industrial floors

Industrial floors require particular care and attention – both during manufacture and in terms of their coating, cleaning and maintenance. This is because they not only have to withstand a considerable amount of strain, but they also need to meet occupational safety standards at the same time. Which cleaning method to use depends largely on the texture of the floor.

industrial floor

Regular cleaning guarantees safety

Industrial floors are not normally cleaned for aesthetic reasons. Rather, since industrial floors are subjected to a great deal of stress on a daily basis – from physical force and from various substances that cause a chemical reaction on the surface – cleaning is required for the safety of personnel and to ensure that operations run smoothly. In the very worst case scenario, damage to the floor covering could cause consequential damage and accidents, with oil, acids and other substances damaging tools and machinery or even injuring workers. Carrying out the correct kind of cleaning at regular intervals can minimise this risk. In particular, floor maintenance in industry can also help floor coverings and buildings to retain their value.

A key distinction here is made between the one-step and the two-step method of floor cleaning:

  • One-step method: First, the floor is scrubbed with cleaning agent; then, in the same work step, the loosened dirt is cleaned off again. This is done in a single pass with the same machine
  • Two-step method: The first step is to cover the entire area with water and cleaning agent, then the second step is to suck the solution up again with a cleaning machine.

Industrial floors made of screed

The majority of industrial floors are made of smooth and continuous screed that is highly compacted to make it extremely durable. When applied, this consists of a smooth paste that is directly poured or trowelled into the object and then left to set. There are various different types of screed available, and each one has specific characteristics that need to be borne in mind during cleaning.

 

Cement screed (CT)

This is the most commonly used type of screed and consists of sand or gravel plus cement and water. The only type of screed produced in the industrial sector is "hard-aggregate floor screed", which can withstand extremely high traffic due to its strength class and the fact that its thickness is dimensioned just right.

Properties: Not resistant to acids or strong alkalis. Exposure to acids gives it a structure similar to that of exposed aggregate concrete, i.e. the concrete becomes rougher and harder to clean.

Calcium sulphate screed (CA)

This includes all screeds with a binder that consists of waterless calcium sulphate (anhydrite). This type is pale in colour and has a very hard, smooth, compact surface that is virtually poreless.

Properties: Sensitive to moisture owing to its binder. This means that prolonged exposure to water should be avoided, especially when deep cleaning. Can only be cleaned using the one-step method.

 

Magnesium screed (MA)

Often also known as magnesite screed, this consists of the binder components magnesium oxide and magnesium chloride. It is extremely hard-wearing and has the ability to bind the mineral aggregate especially firmly. Adding suitable metal oxide dyes enables a uniform colour to be achieved.

Properties: Usually impregnated on the very day it is made. Magnesium screed with a high organic filler content makes the floor warmer underfoot but also more sensitive to moisture. Only cleaning using the one-step method is recommended.

Mastic asphalt screed (AS)

A dense and poreless mixture of fillers such as rock meal, sand, grit or gravel and bitumen. Bitumen is a dark-coloured, semi-volatile substance made up of different types of organic substances that are extracted from the distillation of crude oil.

Properties: Dust-free, water-resistant, largely resistant to acids and alkalis, but not resistant to solvents.

 

 

Surface treatment

The surface may be treated depending on what is required of the coating and the load to which it will be subjected. Surface treatment prevents dust formation in cement-based screeds, for example, and prevents dirt and moisture from penetrating quickly. The properties of the surface treatment in question should be taken into account when cleaning:

The impregnation agent penetrates 0.5–3 mm into the screed (depending on the quality of the substrate) and strengthens it to a certain degree while also filling most of its pores. This does not cover the surface with a continuous film of coating, however.

Properties: Impregnating the pores prevents moisture from penetrating the screed immediately. If a substance such as oil is left to sit on the surface for a long time, this will leave marks that cannot be removed

The compaction fluid is applied like an impregnation agent and reacts only with cement-bonded substrates. It is with this material that the compact reaction in question takes place (approx. 1 mm deep).

Properties: The more frequently wet cleaning is carried out, the more intensively the compaction reaction is triggered again. This strengthens the surface and makes it more resistant to chemical and mechanical stress.

Unlike with impregnation, here a certain layer of material is applied to the substrate. At 0.1–0.3 mm thick, this film is relatively thin. Visually speaking, sealing looks like a coat of paint.

Coatings are normally 0.5–2 mm thick (at 2–6 mm thick they are called coverings). A relatively textured or practically smooth surface can be created depending on the coating used (trowelled-on coating or casting resin). This is important because professional associations and trade supervisory offices require specific slip-resistance classes in certain areas. Seamless floors made of synthetic resin, such as epoxy resin and polyurethane, are common examples.

Properties: Offers high chemical resistance, yet is sensitive to solvents and mechanical cleaning products such as black pads and wire brushes.

Deep cleaning: Removing heavy soiling

Deep cleaning uses wet scrubbing to remove oil and grease marks and encrusted dirt. This requires powerful scrubber driers with a roller scrubbing head. If the floor covering allows, cleaning is carried out using the two-step method at full contact pressure with green roller brushes or pads. The procedure should always be performed step by step to avoid the floor getting too wet or the cleaning fleet drying out again quickly.  

Step 1: Use a scrubber drier to cover the surface that needs cleaning with cleaning agent and then scrub it two or three times until all the dirt has come loose. 

Step 2: Remove the dirty water using the squeegee and the suction device on the machine. Then cover the entire area with clean water again and proceed using the one-step method: Cover with water – scrub – suction. 

If protective films need to be removed in addition to oil and grease, we recommend using RM 754, the alkaline all-round deep cleaner. The RM 69 ASF floor deep cleaner could also be used. The cleaning agent is diluted to between 5 and 10% depending on how dirty the surface is.

Please note: Only the one-step method is recommend for deep cleaning of industrial floors that have not been treated or surfaces that are not water-resistant (see screed types), as otherwise the floor will get too wet and consequential damage could occur.

Deep cleaning with a scrubber drier

Maintenance cleaning with the one-step method

Maintenance cleaning: Removing light soiling

Maintenance cleaning is carried out using the one-step method. To clean away light soiling, the scrubber drier is fitted with red scrubbing brushes or pads. The scrubber drier works with a lower contact pressure and lower roller brush speed. The cleaning agent is diluted to between 0.5 and 3% (RM 69 ASF) depending on how dirty the surface is. We also recommend equipping the machine with the automatic cleaning agent dosing function (dose). Postwiping or rinsing is not required – the floor can be walked on again immediately.

If the cleaning job does not require wet cleaning, maintenance cleaning can also be carried out using a vacuum sweeper.

 

Removing skid marks and tyre tracks

To remove the skid marks left by forklift trucks or the abrasion from tyres, use RM 776 – a cleaning agent that is NTA-free and has been specifically developed for this purpose. Apply it undiluted to the dirty areas using the RM sprayer or spray bottle, leave it to work for a few minutes, then go over the area with a scrubber drier. The roller scrubbing head should be fitted with green roller pads or roller brushes depending on the structure of the surface (smooth or textured respectively). The next step is to remove the dirty water and then rinse with clean water (one-step method).

Please note: Do not use this method on polymer-based or wax coatings, as the cleaning agent will remove them.

 


It comes down to the scrubbing head

Stubborn dirt and heavy soiling are part and parcel of the industrial sector, which is why scrubber driers with a roller scrubbing head are recommended for wet cleaning.

Smooth surfaces are cleaned using roller pads, while rough and textured surfaces are scrubbed using roller brushes. The high cleaning efficiency is down to the following:

  • Brushes/pads running in opposite directions
  • High and uniform contact pressure (up to 260 g/cm2) across the entire working width
  • Extremely high speed (max. 1100 rpm)
  • Excellent floor contact

These properties make it possible to remove the dirt safely from the floor. The high speed also generates a self-cleaning effect, meaning that the cleaning efficiency remains consistently high. Sweeping the floor in advance is often unnecessary as the roller brushes move in opposite directions to sweep the coarse dirt into the integrated sweeper drawer.

 

Scrubbing head with green roller brushes
Kärcher scrubber driers
Kärcher detergents

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