What is Polyacrylate

What is Polyacrylate

 

Polyacrylate is a synthetic polymer used in cooling tower water treatment as a dispersant and scale inhibitor. It’s one of the key components in modern cooling water treatment formulations, especially where phosphate, zinc, or phosphonate programs are used.

What Is Polyacrylate?

  • A polymer made from acrylic acid monomers
  • Comes in various molecular weights, typically from a few thousand to over a million Daltons
  • Often used as sodium polyacrylate in liquid form

How Polyacrylate Works:

  1. Scale Inhibition
  • Prevents precipitation and crystal growth of scale-forming salts like:
    • Calcium carbonate (CaCO₃)
    • Calcium sulfate (CaSO₄)                      Barium sulfate (BaSO₄)
  • Mechanism:
    • Threshold inhibition: Keeps ions soluble at higher concentrations
    • Crystal distortion: Alters the shape of scale crystals, making them less adherent
  1. Dispersant Action
  • Keeps silt, iron oxides, biofilm fragments, and corrosion byproducts suspended
  • Prevents these from settling and forming under-deposit corrosion sites
  • Makes blowdown and filtration more effective
  1. Stabilizes Other Treatment Chemicals
  • Helps keep zinc, phosphate, and phosphonates in solution
  • Reduces precipitation of these additives in hard or high-TDS water

 Why Use Polyacrylate in Cooling Towers?

Benefit

Description

Non-phosphorus

Ideal for discharge compliance

Stable over pH 6–9

Compatible with most tower conditions

Works at high temp

Doesn’t degrade easily

Compatible with biocides

Won’t interfere with oxidizers or biocides

Typical Dosage:

  • 5–20 ppm active polymer, depending on:
    • Cycles of concentration
    • Calcium/alkalinity levels
    • Water reuse or contaminant load

Application Examples:

High cycle towers with scaling risk                 Zero or low phosphate programs

Towers running on reuse/reclaim water        Systems prone to iron fouling or particulate loading