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high adaptation slowly released and slump retaining type of polycarboxylate superplasticizer research

In modern construction, concrete often faces challenges such as rapid slump loss during long-distance transportation and poor adaptability to diverse raw materials, especially in hot weather or congested urban construction scenarios. The high-adaptability, slow-release slump-retaining polycarboxylate superplasticizer synthesized at room temperature solves these critical issues. By optimizing the molecular structure and adopting a composite redox initiation system, it achieves excellent initial dispersion, long-term slump retention, and broad compatibility with cement and mineral admixtures.

This article details the synthesis principles, optimal process parameters, and application advantages of the high adaptation slowly released and slump retaining type of polycarboxylate superplasticizer, providing a valuable guide for the concrete engineering and building materials industries.

Core Advantages of high adaptation slowly released and slump retaining type of polycarboxylate superplasticizer

Compared with traditional polycarboxylate superplasticizers, this slow-release slump-retaining type stands out with three key strengths:

Room-temperature synthesis, energy-saving, and environmentally friendly

It adopts a composite redox initiation system (H₂O₂-APS/VC-FeSO₄) that enables free radical polymerization at 25℃, avoiding the high energy consumption and operational risks of high-temperature synthesis. The process requires no heating equipment, reducing carbon emissions and production costs while ensuring stable product quality.

Excellent slow-release slump retention

Through molecular design, unsaturated ester monomers (HEA and HPA) and amide sulfonic acid monomers (AMPS) are introduced. The ester groups hydrolyze slowly under the alkaline conditions of cement hydration, continuously releasing carboxyl groups to maintain concrete fluidity. Even after 3 hours of transportation, the slump loss is minimal, meeting the requirements of long-distance pouring.

High adaptability and wide application range

It exhibits strong compatibility with different types of cement, fly ash, and mineral admixtures. Its performance is less affected by changes in concrete raw materials, effectively addressing the poor adaptability of traditional superplasticizers and reducing construction quality risks.

Room-Temperature Synthesis Mechanism & Raw Material System

Synthesis mechanism

The composite redox initiation system (H₂O₂-APS/VC-FeSO₄) forms a cyclic reaction to generate hydroxyl radicals (HO·) at room temperature:
  1. H₂O₂ and Fe²⁺ (from FeSO₄) react to produce HO· (Fenton reaction), which initiates the copolymerization of monomers.
  2. VC acts as a reducing agent to reduce Fe³⁺ back to Fe²⁺, allowing the cyclic generation of HO· until H₂O₂ is exhausted.
  3. APS (ammonium persulfate) reacts with water to generate additional H₂O₂, enhancing the initiation efficiency and ensuring complete polymerization.
This mechanism enables efficient polymerization at 25℃, with a low activation energy (34.9 kJ/mol) and a stable reaction, thereby avoiding the risk of explosive polymerization.

Key raw material selection

Raw MaterialSpecificationRole
Isopentenol polyoxyethylene ether (TPEG)Industrial grade, molecular weight 2400Macromonomer (provides long polyoxyethylene side chains for steric hindrance)
Acrylic acid (AA)Analytical gradeSmall monomer (provides carboxyl groups for electrostatic repulsion)
Hydroxyethyl acrylate (HEA)Analytical gradeSlow-release monomer (hydrolyzes to release carboxyl groups, improving slump retention)
Hydroxypropyl acrylate (HPA)Analytical gradeSlow-release monomer (coordinates with HEA to adjust hydrolysis rate)
2-Acrylamide-2-methylpropanesulfonic acid (AMPS)Analytical gradeFunctional monomer (improves adaptability and dispersion stability)
Composite initiatorH₂O₂ (27.5%), APS, VC, FeSO₄·7H₂OTriggers room-temperature polymerization
Chain transfer agent (MET)Self-made mixed solutionControls polymer molecular weight and distribution
Neutralizer30% NaOH solutionAdjusts pH value to 5~7

Optimal Synthesis Process Parameters

Through systematic experiments, the optimal process conditions for synthesizing high-performance polycarboxylate superplasticizer  are determined, directly affecting dispersion, slump retention, and adaptability:

Core process parameters

  • Initial reaction temperature: 25℃ (balances seasonal temperature fluctuations, avoiding poor performance at excessively high or low temperatures).
  • Oxidant-reductant mass ratio: m(H₂O₂+APS) : m(VC+FeSO₄) = 6.5:1.0. This ratio ensures sufficient free radical generation, avoiding incomplete polymerization or excessively low molecular weight.
  • Acid-ether ratio: n(AA) : n(TPEG) = 3.0:1.0. An appropriate number of carboxyl groups enhances electrostatic repulsion without reducing steric hindrance.
  • HEA-HPA molar ratio: n(HEA) : n(HPA) = 0.5:1.5. Coordinates hydrolysis rates for optimal slow-release slump retention.
  • Chain transfer agent dosage: 0.5% of TPEG mass (controls molecular weight, avoiding flocculation from overly long chains or weak repulsion from overly short chains).
  • AMPS dosage: 0.8% of TPEG mass (improves adaptability without reducing adsorption capacity).
  • Dropping time: 2.5 hours (ensures uniform monomer polymerization and stable molecular weight distribution).

Synthesis steps

  1. Add TPEG, AMPS, and deionized water to a four-necked flask, stir, and stabilize the temperature at 25℃.
  2. Add H₂O₂ and APS, stir until TPEG is fully dissolved.
  3. Uniformly dropwise add Mix A (reductant + chain transfer agent + water) over (n+0.5) hours.
  4. After 2 minutes of adding Mix A, start dropping Mix B (AA + HEA + HPA + water) over n hours (total dropping time 2.5 hours).
  5. Keep warm for 1 hour after dropping, neutralize with NaOH solution to pH 5~7, and dilute to 40% solid content to obtain high adaptation slowly released and slump retaining type of polycarboxylate superplasticizer.

Application Prospects & Industry Value

Target application scenarios

  • Long-distance transportation projects: Suitable for urban rail transit, cross-regional highways, and large-scale water conservancy projects where concrete transportation takes 1.5~3 hours.
  • Complex climate conditions: Resists rapid slump loss in hot weather and maintains stability in low-temperature environments.
  • Diverse raw material scenarios: Adapts to different types of cement, fly ash, and mineral admixtures, reducing quality risks caused by raw material variations.

Industry promotion value

  • Energy-saving and environmental protection: Room-temperature synthesis reduces energy consumption by 30%~50% compared with high-temperature processes, aligning with green construction policies.
  • Cost reduction: Lower dosage (0.16% vs. 0.20% for foreign products) and reduced transportation losses (excellent slump retention) cut engineering costs.
  • Quality improvement: Reduces concrete bleeding and segregation, improving compactness and durability, and lowering maintenance costs.

Conclusion

The high-adaptability, slow-release slump-retaining polycarboxylate superplasticizer synthesized at room temperature is an innovative breakthrough in concrete additives.

With its excellent slow-release slump retention, high water-reducing rate, and broad adaptability, high adaptation slowly released and slump retaining type of polycarboxylate superplasticizer effectively solves the pain points of traditional superplasticizers in practical applications. It not only meets the requirements of modern construction for efficient, stable, and environmentally friendly concrete additives but also provides strong technical support for the high-quality development of the construction industry. As infrastructure construction continues to expand, this product will have broad application prospects in various engineering fields.

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