
Polycarboxylate Superplasticizer In Machine Made Sand Concrete
Blog Polycarboxylate Supe
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High‑strength concrete (e.g., C60 and above) is increasingly used in modern high‑rise buildings, long‑span bridges, and other demanding infrastructure. However, achieving such high strength typically requires a low water-to-binder ratio and a high cementitious content. The result is a highly viscous fresh concrete that is difficult to pump, place, and finish – a major challenge for construction efficiency and quality.
Conventional polycarboxylate superplasticizers (PCEs) offer excellent water reduction and slump retention, but they often do not adequately reduce the plastic viscosity of low‑water‑ratio mixes. To address this issue, researchers have developed specialized viscosity‑reducing PCEs by introducing functional groups such as sulfonate, silane, or ester moieties. However, many of these syntheses require heating and long reaction times, increasing energy consumption and production costs.
A recent study synthesis of a viscosity reducing polycarboxylate superplasticizer (designated PCE‑V1) using allyl alcohol polyoxyethylene ether (APEG), acrylic acid (AA), maleic anhydride (MA), and a specific functional ester monomer (VE). This article summarizes their optimization, structural characterization, and concrete performance results.
| Parameter | Optimal value |
| n(AA):n(APEG) | 2.0 |
| n(MA):n(APEG) | 4.8 |
| Ester‑ether ratio (VE:APEG) | 1.8 |
| Vc dosage (on APEG) | 2.5% |
| H₂O₂ dosage (on APEG) | 2.5% |
| Dropping time (A / B) | 75 / 80 min |
| Reaction temperature | 20 °C (room temperature) |
| Sample | Mₙ (g/mol) | Mₐ (g/mol) | PDI | Conversion (%) |
| Conventional PCE | 22,538 | 33,649 | 1.49 | 92.7 |
PCE‑V1 | 6,743 | 12,763 | 1.89 | 88.0 |
| PCE type | Slump/Spread (mm) | Inverted slump cone emptying time (s) | Plastic viscosity (Pa·s) |
| Conventional PCE | 620/240 | 7.35 | 2.6 |
| PCE‑V1 (this work) | 620/240 | 3.35 | 2.3 |
| WH viscosity‑reducing | 610/240 | 6.33 | 2.3 |
| TJ viscosity reducer | 600/240 | 4.33 | 2.5 |
| PCE type | 3d strength (MPa) | 7d strength (MPa) | 28d strength (MPa) |
| Conventional PCE | 31.6 | 51.0 | 62.2 |
| PCE‑V1 | 35.1 | 52.8 | 61.9 |
| WH viscosity‑reducing | 33.6 | 51.4 | 61.8 |
| TJ viscosity reducer | 33.6 | 49.9 | 68.3 (?) see note |
| Feature | Benefit |
Room‑temperature synthesis | No heating required → energy savings, lower CO₂ footprint, simpler equipment |
Short reaction time | Dropping time only 75–80 min + 1 h hold → high productivity |
Excellent viscosity reduction | Inverted cone emptying time 3.35 s vs. 7.35 s for conventional PCE |
Good early strength | 3‑day strength 35.1 MPa (11% higher than conventional PCE) |
Comparable 28‑day strength | 61.9 MPa, essentially equal to conventional PCE |
Low plastic viscosity | 2.3 Pa·s, improving pumpability and placement |
Simple formulation | Readily available monomers (APEG, AA, MA, VE) |

Polycarboxylate Superplasticizer In Machine Made Sand Concrete
Blog Polycarboxylate Supe