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Polycarboxylate superplasticizers are the core high-performance admixtures for high-strength, high-durability concrete, renowned for their high water-reduction rates, excellent slump retention, and environmental friendliness. Traditional PCE synthesis typically requires high temperatures (60~80℃) and long reaction times (5~7h), leading to high energy consumption, low production efficiency, and increased manufacturing costs—these drawbacks have become a bottleneck restricting the large-scale industrial production of PCE.
To address these industry pain points, low temperature synthesis technology of polycarboxylate superplasticizer has become a key research direction in the concrete admixture field. This article focuses on a high-performance polycarboxylate superplasticizer synthesized via free radical copolymerization at 20~25℃ (room temperature) with isopentenol polyoxyethylene ether (TPEG) as the core macromonomer. It systematically elaborates on the optimal synthesis process parameters, performance characteristics, and core advantages of this low-temperature synthesis technology, providing a cost-effective, energy-saving technical solution for the industrial production of PCE.
The performance of low-temperature-synthesised PCE (dispersion, slump retention, water-reduction rate) is closely related to the monomer molar ratio, initiator dosage, reaction temperature, feeding mode, and reaction time. Through a series of single-factor experiments, the optimal process parameters were determined with the cement paste fluidity (initial + 1h retention) and water reduction rate as the key evaluation indices. All experiments were carried out under a water-cement ratio of 0.29 and a PCE admixture amount of 0.18% (based on cement mass).

Research on synthesis and performances of polycarboxylate slump retaining agent
Blog Research on synthesi