1. Basic Definition
Polyacrylic Acid (PAA)
- Acid form of the polymer
- Chaical form: –[CH₂–CH(COOH)]–ₙ
- Contains carboxylic acid groups (COOH)
Sodium Polyacrylate (Na-PAA or PAAS)
- Neutralized salt form of PAA
- Chaical form: –[CH₂–CH(COO⁻Na⁺)]–ₙ
- Carboxylic groups are replaced by sodium carboxylate (COO⁻Na⁺)
2. Solubility & Water Behavior
PAA
- Soluble in water only at higher pH
- In acidic pH, it is less ionized → low swelling
- Forms viscous solutions after neutralization
Sodium Polyacrylate
- Highly water-soluble
- Extraely water-absorbing / superabsorbent
- Swells to form large hydrogels
- Can absorb several hundred times its weight in water
3. pH Sensitivity
Polyacrylic Acid
- pH-responsive polymer
- Thickens dramatically after neutralization
- Behavior changes h3ly with pH
Sodium Polyacrylate
- Already neutralized
- More stable across pH ranges
- Swelling decreases in high-salt environments (salt-sensitive)
4. Applications
Polyacrylic Acid (PAA)
Used for:
- Detergent dispersants
- Thickening agents
- Water-treatment scale inhibitor
- Adhesives / coatings
- Cosmetics (when neutralized, e.g., carbomer-like use)
Sodium Polyacrylate
Used for:
- Superabsorbents (diapers, sanitary pads)
- Water-retention gels for agriculture
- Leak-proof gels in medical absorbents
- Thickening agents in some detergents
- Sludge dewatering
5. Physical Properties
| Property | PAA | Sodium Polyacrylate |
|---|---|---|
| Form | Liquid or powder | Powder or granule |
| Water Absorption | Low | Extraely high |
| pH Behavior | Highly pH-sensitive | More stable |
| Viscosity | Increases after neutralization | Gel formation in water |
| Salt Resistance | Better | Poor (swelling drops in salt water) |
6. Which to Use?
Choose Polyacrylic Acid when:
✔ You need dispersing, scale inhibition, viscosity control, or pH-responsive behavior
✔ Applications in detergents, coatings, water treatment, cosmetics
Choose Sodium Polyacrylate when:
✔ You need superabsorbent properties
✔ Applications in diapers, agriculture water gels, spill absorbents
