
How Polycarboxylate Superplasticizer Dosage Affects Concrete Performance In Plateau Regions
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PCE mother liquor is the core raw material for preparing high-performance concrete admixtures, widely used in ready-mix plants, precast factories and infrastructure construction. However, liquid PCE products face prominent storage problems during long-term stockpiling and transportation, especially mildew contamination under hot, humid, sun-exposed environments. Severe mildew consumes active polymer ingredients in PCE mother liquor, weakening the water-reducing and slump-retaining capacity, leading to unqualified fresh concrete and hidden structural safety hazards.
This paper reports a 14-month storage test on two commercial PCE mother liquors under two distinct storage environments. It records visual changes (discoloration, mildew colony growth) in the PCE liquid, tests cement paste fluidity and C3 concrete workability/compressive strength of mildewed samples, and summarizes standardized storage measures to prevent mildew and stabilize PCE performance for batching plants and admixture manufacturers.
PCE Mother Liquors
PCE-1: 50% solid content, pH 5.4, transparent liquid
PCE-2: 50% solid content, pH 5.1, transparent liquid
Compound Auxiliaries: Food-grade sugar retarder H1, sodium gluconate H2 (30% solid), air-entraining agent YQ (35% solid)
Cement: Runfeng P·O 42.5
Aggregate: Zone 2 medium river sand, 5–20 mm continuous graded crushed stone
Mixing water: Local tap water
Standard compound formula for finished admixture (mass ratio): 56.95% PCE mother liquor + 40% water + 2% H2 + 1% H1 + 0.05% YQ.
C30 concrete mix per cubic meter: Cement 360 kg, sand 980 kg, stone 865 kg, water 175 kg.
Environment A (sunny, high humidity)
Environment B (shaded, cool, low humidity)
Key cause analysis: Rich organic retarders (gluconate, sugar) in compounded PCE provide nutrients for microbes. Sunlight accelerates polymer aging, while summer high temperatures and high humidity accelerate microbial growth, triggering discoloration and mildew. Cool, shaded, sealed storage effectively inhibits microbial activity.
| Sample | Initial Slump/Spread (mm) | 0.5h Slump/Spread (mm) | 1h Slump/Spread (mm) |
| Fresh PCE | 210 / 520 | 210 / 470 | 195 / 395 |
| Mild mildew PCE | 210 / 515 | 210 / 455 | 190 / 385 |
| Slight mildew only causes tiny slump loss, with negligible impact on on-site pouring. |
Group 2: Severely mildewed PCE-1
| Sample | Initial Slump/Spread (mm) | 0.5h Slump/Spread (mm) | 1h Slump/Spread (mm) |
| Fresh PCE | 220 / 545 | 210 / 485 | 200 / 425 |
| Severe mildew PCE | 215 / 505 | 205 / 425 | 185 / 370 |
| Severe mildew significantly accelerates slump loss after 30 and 60 minutes, reducing pumpability and workable time windows for transit concrete. |
The storage environment directly determines the stability of the polycarboxylate superplasticizer mother liquor. Sunlight only causes harmless liquid discoloration, while combined high temperature and high humidity trigger mildew contamination that permanently degrades PCE’s core water-reducing and slump-retaining functions, damaging fresh concrete workability and long-term mechanical properties.
Admixture manufacturers and ready-mix concrete plants should implement standardized, shaded, sealed, low-humidity storage protocols, conduct periodic visual inspections, and deploy bacteriostatic additives for summer stock to maintain consistent PCE performance and ensure the quality of all cast-in-place and precast concrete projects.

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