1. Core Function of SMAS in Polycarboxylate Synthesis
SMAS provides sulfonate anionic groups to enhance electrostatic repulsion and slump retention; its methyl steric hindrance controls molecular weight and avoids gelation. The dosage directly determines water-reducing rate, slump retention, adaptability to clay, and finished mother liquor stability.
2. Basic Calculation Standard
Dosage is calculated by molar percentage of total polymerizable monomers (macromonomer + acrylic acid + SMAS).
Industrial mainstream polycarboxylate mother liquor solid content: 40%–50%.
General Optimal Molar Ranges
| Polycarboxylate Type | SMAS Optimal Molar Ratio | Core Target Performance |
|---|---|---|
| High water-reduction type (early strength, high strength concrete) | 2.0% ~ 3.5 mol% | Max water reduction, short slump loss |
| Standard slump-retaining type (commercial ready-mix concrete) | 3.5% ~ 5.0 mol% | Balanced water reduction + 2–4h slump retention |
| Super long slump retention / high clay resistance type | 5.0% ~ 6.5 mol% | Anti-mud, slow slump loss for aggregate with high mud content |
| Low-viscosity self-compacting concrete formula | 4.0% ~ 5.5 mol% | Low slurry viscosity, good flow spreading |
3. Corresponding Mass Dosage Reference (Common Industrial Formula)
Typical monomer molar base:
PEG macromonomer (TPEG/HPEG) 70 mol% + Acrylic acid 25–28 mol% + SMAS balance
- 3 mol% SMAS: Mass proportion accounts for 2.8%–3.2% of total solid monomers
- 5 mol% SMAS: Mass proportion accounts for 4.5%–5.0% of total solid monomers
Example 40% Solid Polycarboxylate Mother Liquor Batch (1000kg)
Total solid monomers ~400 kg
- Standard retention formula (4.5 mol% SMAS): SMAS powder addition ≈ 18–20 kg per batch
- High anti-clay formula (6 mol% SMAS): SMAS powder addition ≈ 23–25 kg per batch
4. Consequences of Under-Dosage SMAS
- Insufficient sulfonate negative charges: Weak electrostatic repulsion, low water reducing rate
- Fast slump loss within 1 hour, cannot meet ready-mix transport requirements
- Poor anti-clay ability; mud in aggregate sharply reduces dispersion effect
- Narrow cement adaptability, easy to appear segregation or slow setting with different brands of cement
5. Consequences of Over-Dosage SMAS (>7 mol%)
- Excess hydrophilic sulfonate groups increase air entrainment, reduce concrete compressive strength
- Longer setting time, bad for early-strength engineering
- Higher raw material cost without obvious performance improvement
- Finished mother liquor viscosity rises, poor liquidity, easy layering during long storage
- Excessive anions aggravate steel bar corrosion risk in long-term concrete projects
6. Fine-Tuning Rules Based on Raw Materials & Construction Conditions
- High mud sand/stone aggregate: Raise SMAS dosage by 1–1.5 mol% for anti-clay performance
- Summer high-temperature construction (fast cement hydration): Increase SMAS to 4.5–6 mol% to extend retention time
- Winter low-temperature construction: Reduce SMAS to 2.5–3.5 mol% to avoid excessive retardation
- Low-purity SMAS liquid (35% content): Appropriately increase feeding volume by 8%–12% to offset impurity interference; high-purity 99.5% powder strictly follow standard molar ratio
- If macromonomer molecular weight is low: Properly lift SMAS dosage to stabilize molecular weight distribution
7. Matching Process Operation Tips
- SMAS powder pre-dissolved with deionized water before dripping together with acrylic acid, uniform distribution on polymer chain
- Initiator dosage slightly increased when SMAS >5 mol%, sulfonate groups consume partial free radicals
- After polymerization neutralize pH to 6–7.5 to maximize sulfonate charge activity






