Hi All,
There is some truth in just about every post in here. However, 'some truth' means some... 'NOT truth'...
First,
Bonding of Epoxy to Concrete:
VERY VERY VERY few epoxies chemically bond to concrete... Almost all epoxies will simply form the mechanical bond that has already been referred to.
Degreasers:
A GOOD degreaser will attach to the oil and bring it to the surface so it can be wiped up or washed away. It DOES NOT magically dispose of the oil for you! So, if you use a degreaser and don't wash it away well enough the oil will simply redeposit after the water evaporates. Most degreasers are minimally effective under the surface of the concrete. There are many types of degreasers that work by many different mechanisms. How well a degreaser works depends on the type of oil (either synthetic or fatty acid) and the exact mechanism of the degreaser. We have about 10 different degreasers that work in various ways and then... various concentrations of those formulations. It is very difficult to simply classify all degreasers as the same.
Using Organic Solvents:
Using organic solvents like Lacquer Thinners can work in many instances. The thinner simply thins the oil and makes it more mobile. Then, one of 2 things happens... you either soak up the thinned oil with rags or the thinned oil pushes it's way further into the concrete UNTIL the organic solvent evaporates or combines with moisture vapor. THEN, the oil will begin to push it's way back up. Whether this approach will work for you or not depends on how much oil you have, the porosity of your concrete, the amount of sludge in the trapped oil, the vapor pressure under the concrete, and whether you are using a chemical resistant primer that will cure slow enough for the organic vapors to escape and fast enough that it will develop chemical resistance before the oil returns to the curing film. In general (probably should have put that in caps), this will typically work with small oil stains. Please keep in mind my perspective when I say small oil stains. Our products are being used every week on oil SATURATED floors. This past week a contractor did 80,000 ft2 where there was so much oil used that it was even in the air and dripped from the ceilings during the coating process. SO, I would consider just about any garage oil stain small.
OilEating Microbes:
Our oil eating microbes are living organisms that eat oil and excrete carbon diaoxide and water (in minute amounts). So, they eat the stuff you don't want and excrete natural stuff into the air that is already there anyway! In addition, since these little wonders of microbiology are so small they penetrate into the concrete, eat the deep oil, and excrete CO2 which easily escape the surface of the concrete.
SO... holy smokes that's alot to write...
If you're not concerned about money and want to make sure then go straight for the microbes. If the budget is more of an issue the go for the degreaser, organic solvent, or even a combination of both.
LAST, our BondTite 1101 IS chemically modified to chemically bond to inorganic surfaces like concrete. In addition, it is fluoropolymer modified with an extremely low surface tension that forces it to wick into the concrete and allows it to displace fluid oil. Last, it is modified so that it is NOT sensitive to moisture. If you think about the process of getting rid of oil it doesn't take long to figure out why all of these traits are so important.
OK, I've skimmed the surface on alot of different areas... but... I'm tired now... If anyone has any questions about what I've written the best way to get them answered is to ask Fred (AlphaGarage) since I'm only in here sporadically right now. Or, you can just post and hope I see it someday... lol...
Good Luck with your floors all...