Sparco

Epoxy Flooring · 5 min read · Updated 2026-07-07

Why Solvent-Free Epoxy Flooring Is Used in Industrial Facilities

Why Solvent-Free Epoxy Flooring Is Used in Industrial Facilities

Answer summary

Solvent-free (100% solids) epoxy flooring cures without releasing solvent, so nearly everything applied stays on the floor as film build. Industrial facilities specify it for thick, seamless, chemical-resistant floors with low odour during application — typical examples are self-smoothing systems for production areas and roller-grade coatings for workshops.

What "solvent-free" actually means

Epoxy coatings come in three carrier types. Solvent-based products use solvent that evaporates during cure; water-based products disperse the resin in water; solvent-free (100% solids) products contain essentially no carrier at all — the resin and hardener react and everything applied remains as cured film.

That has two practical consequences: high film build per coat (self-smoothing systems are applied millimetres thick in one operation), and low odour and VOC release during application, which matters in enclosed industrial spaces and near food or occupied areas.

Why industrial facilities specify it

For thinner-build applications — sealing a workshop floor, coating a store — roller-grade solvent-free epoxies such as Sparcofloor #102 provide the same chemistry at lower film builds.

  • High build in one application — self-smoothing systems such as Sparcofloor SL 200 are typically applied at 1.6–2.0 kg/m² as a seamless wearing layer
  • Mechanical strength — the SL 200 TDS indicates compressive strength up to around 50 N/mm² when cured
  • Chemical resistance — a continuous, non-porous film for spill and washdown zones
  • Low odour during application — relevant for phased works in operating facilities
  • Seamless, cleanable finish — no joints for contamination to sit in

Trade-offs to plan around

Solvent-free epoxies have a working-time constraint: with no solvent to slow the reaction, pot life is short — the SL 200 TDS indicates up to about 20 minutes at 28 °C — so mixing and application are planned batch by batch. Substrate requirements are also real: concrete moisture content and preparation quality drive adhesion, so damp slabs may point instead to a damp-tolerant water-based epoxy or a moisture-tolerant primer beneath the solvent-free body.

As with all resin floors, the right answer is a build-up matched to the substrate, traffic, chemical exposure and shutdown window — not a single product choice.

When to use this system

  • Production areas needing a thick, seamless, chemical-resistant wearing layer
  • Enclosed spaces where low odour during application matters
  • Floors subject to heavy point loads and wheeled traffic
  • Workshops and stores needing an economical sealed floor (roller grade)

Where it is commonly used

  • Warehouses, storage areas and loading bays
  • Pharmaceutical facilities and clean rooms
  • Assembly halls, plant rooms and garages
  • Chemical processing and containment floors

Related Sparco products

Recommended TDS downloads

Browse the TDS Download Centre →

Related market segments

Frequently asked questions

Is solvent-free epoxy the same as low-VOC epoxy?

Closely related: solvent-free (100% solids) products release little to no solvent during cure, so they are inherently low-VOC during application. Water-based epoxies are the other common low-odour option, trading film build for damp tolerance.

How thick is a solvent-free epoxy floor?

It depends on the system: roller-applied coatings build thin films, while self-smoothing systems are applied millimetres thick — Sparcofloor SL 200 is typically applied at around 1.6–2.0 kg/m² as a self-smoothing wearing layer.

Can solvent-free epoxy go on damp concrete?

Substrate moisture limits apply — the SL 200 TDS indicates a maximum concrete moisture content of around 5%. Damp slabs are usually handled with a damp-tolerant primer or a water-based epoxy system instead; confirm with the technical team.

Values referenced in this guide come from the products' Technical Data Sheets. Final specification depends on substrate, traffic, chemical exposure and shutdown window — confirm the complete build-up with our technical team.

← All technical resources

Need a specification for your project?

Describe your substrate, environment and traffic, and Sparco's technical team will recommend a complete coating or flooring system — at no obligation.