What is the cause of the peeling of the wall tiles in the kitchen?

Updated on Kitchen 2024-07-11
2 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    There are no more than three reasons for tile peeling: 1. The gap is too small, caused by thermal expansion and cold contraction; 2. Quality problems; 3. If it is a place where water is seen, in winter, the moisture will penetrate between the glaze layer and the germ layer, and then when the moisture freezes, it will expand, and the glaze layer will be peeled off. If your kitchen temperature freezes in winter, then most of the time, it's the third reason.

  2. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    There is no seam left when the tile is pasted, obviously it is not a problem with the tile, it is caused by thermal expansion and contraction, and the tile touches the porcelain.

Related questions
6 answers2024-07-11

Summary. The kitchen tiles fell off, probably due to the kitchen being too dry. You don't have to worry, first clean up the perimeter of the falling tile opening, get new bricks, soak them with water, spray some water on the wall of the fallen tiles, and coat the back of the new tiles with a relative thickness of cement and gently knock them to dry. >>>More

3 answers2024-07-11

For some of the bathroom wall tiles that have fallen off, you can find a decorator to repair them, or you can do it yourself. If only the tile is falling off, and the cement mortar is still firm between the base layer, then consumers can go to the building materials city to buy tile paste, apply it directly to the tile, and paste it on the cement mortar on the wall. >>>More

3 answers2024-07-11

First, the quality of cement is not good, and second, the wall is waterproofed, but the brick base treatment is not done. >>>More

5 answers2024-07-11

Personally, I think there are several possibilities:

1.The porcelain tiles should be soaked with water when they are attached to the wall, and your workers may have omitted this different process, resulting in poor adhesion. >>>More

2 answers2024-07-11

The inner wall is damp, causing alkaline substances to volatilize!