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Polycarboxylate Superplasticizer in Self Compacting Concrete

Self compacting concrete (SCC) is widely used in dense steel reinforcement and complex structural engineering by eliminating the need for mechanical vibration. As a core admixture, polycarboxylate superplasticizer directly determines the workability, strength retention, and long-term durability of SCC.

This study investigated the systematic research results for three typical PCE types in C60 SCC: standard type, slump-retaining type, and viscosity-reducing type. This study combines macroscopic performance testing with microstructure analysis using SEM, XRD, and MIP techniques.

Why Polycarboxylate Superplasticizer Matters for SCC

Polycarboxylate-based superplasticizers are the core admixture in SCC. They provide:
  • High water reduction (up to 30%)
  • Excellent fluidity and passing ability
  • Controlled slump retention over time
Without the right PCE, SCC may suffer from:
  • Rapid loss of workability (slump loss)
  • Segregation and bleeding
  • Reduced compressive strength

Raw Materials and Experimental Design

The test uses P·O 42.5 cement, Class II fly ash, S95 slag powder, machine-made sand, and 5–20 mm crushed stone. Three PCE superplasticizers are compared:
  • Standard type: water reduction rate 28%
  • Retarding slump-retaining type: water reduction rate 30% (with slow-release functional groups)
  • Viscosity-reducing type: water reduction rate 26% (high dispersion)
The C60 SCC mix design:
  • Binder content: 550 kg/m³
  • Water-binder ratio: 0.32
  • Sand ratio: 42%
  • PCE dosage: 0.4%–1.0% (by binder mass)
Test items include slump flow, T500 time, J-ring difference, 1h/2h workability loss, and 3d/7d/28d compressive strength.

Effects of PCE Type on SCC Performance

At the same dosage of 0.7%, the retarding slump-retaining PCE shows the best overall performance:
  • Initial slump flow: 718 mm
  • T500 flow time: 14 s
  • J-ring difference: 18 mm
  • 2h slump loss: only 55 mm
  • 28d compressive strength: 67.8 MPa
By comparison:
  • The viscosity-reducing type has fast flow but lower strength (62.5 MPa) due to slight segregation.
  • The standard type has a large workability loss (135 mm at 2h).
This proves the retarding slump-retaining PCE provides stable dispersion and long-lasting workability retention.

Optimal Dosage of Retarding Slump-Retaining PCE

The best performance is achieved at a dosage of 0.6%–0.8%:
  • Slump flow reaches 720 mm
  • 2h loss is only 20–50 mm
  • 28d strength up to 68 MPa
When the dosage exceeds 1.0%, bleeding and segregation occur, resulting in a drop in strength to 63.8 MPa.

Mechanism of Slump Retention

The retarding PCE contains slow-release side chains that gradually hydrolyze in the alkaline environment of cement paste. These chains maintain strong electrostatic repulsion and steric hindrance, preventing rapid flocculation of cement particles and effectively slowing workability loss.

Microstructural Analysis (SEM, XRD, MIP)

SEM Morphology

At the optimal dosage (0.7%):
  • C-S-H gel is dense and network-structured
  • Ettringite (AFt) is evenly distributed
  • No obvious microcracks
At excessive dosage (1.0%):
  • C-S-H gel is loose and porous
  • Large voids and microcracks appear in the interfacial transition zone (ITZ)
  • Structural integrity is weakened

XRD Phase Analysis

The optimal group shows a lower Ca(OH)₂ peak intensity, indicating greater hydration and higher conversion to C-S-H gel. Excessive PCE leads to incomplete hydration and higher residual Ca(OH)₂.

MIP Pore Structure

Optimal dosage:
  • Total porosity: 17.2%
  • Most pores are harmless pores (<20 nm)
Excessive dosage:
  • Total porosity rises to 21.8%
  • Harmful and multi-harmic pores increase significantly, reducing strength and permeability resistance.

Practical Recommendations for Engineers

Cement Type Adjustment

  • For P·II composite cement (higher blended materials), increase PCE dosage to 0.8–0.9% and add 0.05–0.08% early-strength agent.

Seasonal Considerations

  • Summer (>30°C): Add 0.05% retarder or use ice water. Expect a faster slump loss.
  • Winter (<5°C): Add antifreeze components and extend mixing time.

Workability vs. Stability Balance

  • Do not exceed 0.8% dosage unless absolutely necessary.
  • Monitor bleeding rate (should remain below 0.5%).
  • Adjust the sand-to-aggregate ratio and the water-to-binder ratio based on the actual aggregate moisture.

Conclusion

This study confirms that polycarboxylate superplasticizers—especially the retarding-slump retaining type—are essential for high-performance self-compacting concrete. At an optimal dosage of 0.6–0.8%, they deliver:
  • Excellent initial workability (slump flow ≥ 720 mm)
  • Low 2-hour slump loss (≤ 55 mm)
  • High 28-day strength (≥ 67 MPa)
  • Dense, crack-free microstructure
Excessive dosage (>1.0%) causes segregation, porosity, and strength loss. Engineers should tailor the PCE type and dosage to local materials, temperature, and structural requirements.

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