Organic coatings are applied to protect underground and aboveground pipelines and other objects from
corrosion. Hot-water soak and cathodic disbondment tests are routinely used in the coating industry to
evaluate the performance of organic coatings that protect metal pipes in offshore (seawater) and
onshore (aboveground or underground) applications. Numerous technical standards, which specify the
operating conditions and test parameters, are available. The technical standards are applicable when
the operating temperature is below 100 °C. However, the organic coatings could be subjected to
temperatures above 100 °C when a pipeline is carrying hot fluids. Several attempts have been made to
improve the existing test methods for evaluating coating performance above 100 °C. In this paper, we
provide a critical review of published literature on coating performance evaluation above 100 °C. In
addition, we discuss the test conditions that must be considered in developing accelerated coating
evaluation methods above 100 °C.
Keywords: organic coating, hot-water soak, cathodic disbondment