
Slow Release Polycarboxylate Superplasticizer Synthesized with Functional Monomers
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Concrete performance in cold weather is a persistent challenge for construction projects. Low temperatures slow down cement hydration, delay strength development, and extend project timelines. While polycarboxylate superplasticizers (PCEs) have revolutionized concrete admixture technology, most standard PCEs lose effectiveness as temperatures drop.
Low-temperature early strength polycarboxylate superplasticizer are specifically designed to overcome this barrier. They accelerate hydration at low temperatures without compromising workability or long-term strength.
This article analyzes a recent systematic study that:
Optimized the synthesis of a novel low-temperature early strength PCE (designated DW07)
Investigated the effects of pre-curing time and pre-curing temperature on mortar and concrete strength
Compared DW07 against a commercial early-strength PCE (SK-1)
Key finding: With 3 hours pre-curing at 15°C, DW07 increases 1-day concrete compressive strength by 43.8% compared to plain concrete – significantly outperforming the commercial benchmark.
| Component | Role | Details |
|---|---|---|
| EPEG-5000 | Polyether macromonomer | Molecular weight 5000 |
| Acrylic acid (AA) | Carboxyl groups | Adsorption on cement |
| Thioglycolic acid (TGA) | Chain transfer agent | Controls molecular weight |
| U1 (silane monomer) | Functional monomer | 3-methacryloxypropyl triisopropoxysilane |
| P2 (proprietary) | Functional monomer | Self-made, enhances early strength |
| H₂O₂ + FeSO₄ + TP1351 | Redox initiation system | Low-temperature copolymerization |
Free-radical copolymerization at 15°C (low temperature process). The functional monomers U1 and P2 were incorporated to promote:
Four factors (n(AA)/n(EPEG), n(TGA)/n(EPEG), n(U1)/n(EPEG), n(P2)/n(EPEG)) at three levels were tested. Performance indicators:
Cement paste fluidity
Mortar flow
1-day mortar compressive strength
| Parameter | Optimal Ratio |
|---|---|
| n(AA)/n(EPEG) | 9.45 |
| n(TGA)/n(EPEG) | 0.23 |
| n(U1)/n(EPEG) | 0.72 |
| n(P2)/n(EPEG) | 0.36 |
Why this works:
Mortar specimens (40×40×160 mm, water/binder=0.35, cement/sand=1:3) were:
| Pre-curing time | 1d strength (MPa) | Improvement vs. Blank |
|---|---|---|
| 1h – Blank | 4.6 | – |
| 1h – DW07 | 5.7 | +14.1% |
| 1h – SK-1 | 5.2 | +13.0% |
| 3h – Blank | 5.9 | – |
| 3h – DW07 | 7.2 | +22.8% |
| 3h – SK-1 | 6.6 | +12.3% |
| 5h – Blank | 6.3 | – |
| 5h – DW07 | 7.7 | +19.0% |
| 5h – SK-1 | 6.9 | +10.3% |
Key observations:
Low temperature suppresses early hydration, but adequate pre-curing at 20°C before cold storage gives the concrete a “head start” – especially effective with DW07.
Pre-curing time fixed at 3 hours. Pre-curing temperatures tested: 25°C, 20°C, 15°C, 10°C, 5°C (all RH>90%). Then transferred to 5°C for a total of 24 h.
| Pre-curing temp | 1d strength (MPa) | Improvement vs. blank | 28d strength (MPa) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 25°C – Blank | 5.7 | – | – |
| 25°C – DW07 | 7.7 | +35.1% | – |
| 15°C – Blank | 4.5 | – | 51.5 |
| 15°C – DW07 | 5.7 | +25.5% | 57.6 (+11.8%) |
| 5°C – Blank | 3.9 | – | 49.6 |
| 5°C – DW07 | 4.8 | +23.1% | 52.5 (+5.8%) |
Key findings:
Optimal pre-curing temperature = 15°C – balances early strength gain and ultimate strength development.
Using the optimal conditions: pre-curing time 3h, pre-curing temperature 15°C, then 5°C for the remaining time. Concrete mix: 360 kg/m³ cement, w/c=0.49, PCE dosage 0.2% solids.
| Sample | Slump (mm) | Spread (mm) | Air content (%) | 1d strength (MPa) | 3d strength (MPa) | 28d strength (MPa) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Blank (no PCE) | 200 | 505 | 2.1 | 8.9 | 27.8 | 50.2 |
| SK-1 (commercial) | 205 | 515 | 2.3 | 10.6 | 31.9 | 55.7 |
| DW07 (this study) | 220 | 540 | 2.5 | 12.8 | 35.4 | 58.9 |
Performance summary:
1d strength: DW07 = 12.8 MPa → 43.8% higher than blank, 20.8% higher than SK-1
3d strength: DW07 = 35.4 MPa → 27.3% higher than blank, 11.0% higher than SK-1
28d strength: DW07 = 58.9 MPa → 17.3% higher than blank, 5.7% higher than SK-1
Workability: DW07 gives the highest slump and spread, plus a slightly higher air content (2.5%) which may improve freeze-thaw resistance.
Conclusion: DW07 significantly outperforms the commercial early-strength polycarboxylate superplasticizer in both early and late strength, while providing better workability.
Based on the study’s findings, here are actionable guidelines for using low temperature early strength polycarboxylate superplasticizer:
Ensure your admixture contains functional monomers (silane and proprietary P2) and has an AA/EPEG ratio of approximately 9.45.
This study successfully developed a low temperature early strength polycarboxylate superplasticizer (DW07) through orthogonal optimization of AA, TGA, and two functional monomers (U1 and P2). The optimal formulation is:
Pre-curing conditions significantly affect performance. The best results are achieved with:
Under these conditions, DW07 increases:
Compared to a commercial early-strength PCE (SK-1), DW07 provides:
For contractors and ready-mix producers working in cold climates or winter conditions, DW07 offers a proven, high-performance solution to accelerate construction schedules without sacrificing final concrete quality.

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