
How Polycarboxylate Superplasticizer Dosage Effect On The High Strength Concrete
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Polycarboxylate superplasticizer (PCE) is the dominant high-performance admixture for modern ready-mix, precast and infrastructure concrete. It delivers ultra-low dosage, high water-reduction rate, and long slump retention. However, aggregates containing clay minerals (montmorillonite, kaolinite, illite) create a universal industry pain point: clay strongly adsorbs PCE molecules, consumes effective admixture components, drastically reduces fresh concrete fluidity and shortens slump retention time. In severe cases, concrete loses pumpability entirely.
This article systematically elaborates on two core clay-PCE adsorption mechanisms, compares the adsorption intensities of three typical clay minerals, and summarizes two mainstream technical routes to address clay sensitivity: compound sacrificial/anti-clay additives and molecular structural modification of PCE. It provides theoretical reference and practical formula guidance for concrete batching plants and admixture manufacturers dealing with high-mud manufactured sand.
Montmorillonite (bentonite) features expandable layered crystal lattices. Isomorphic substitution inside clay sheets produces permanent negative interlayer charges. When cement hydrates release Ca²⁺ cations, PCE’s hydrophilic polyether side chains are pulled into clay interlayers via hydrogen bonding and van der Waals forces. XRD data verify that the montmorillonite interlayer spacing expands significantly upon adsorption of PCE molecules, indicating intercalation behavior.
TOC adsorption test data show montmorillonite adsorbs 110–120 mg PCE per gram, around 50 times the adsorption capacity of cement particles. Massive PCE molecules are trapped within clay layers and cannot disperse cement flocs, resulting in rapid slump loss.
Kaolinite and illite have rigid, non-expandable crystal structures without loose interlayer spaces. Their particle edges carry positive charges after cation exchange, which attract negatively charged carboxylate groups (-COO⁻) on PCE main chains via electrostatic attraction.
Their adsorption capacity is far lower than that of montmorillonite: kaolinite adsorbs only 10–20 mg/g of PCE, about 5 times less than cement’s adsorption capacity. Since no intercalation occurs, partial PCE side chains still retain steric hindrance, thereby maintaining limited dispersion performance.

How Polycarboxylate Superplasticizer Dosage Effect On The High Strength Concrete
Blog How Polycarboxylate

Synthesis And Performance Of Workability Polycarboxylate Superplasticizer
Blog Synthesis and Perfor