• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

InterConex

Your Total Source For Concrete Construction Equipment

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Products
    • Concrete Finishing
    • Concrete Paving
    • Concrete Screeds
    • Strategic Floor Reinforcement
    • Surface Preparation
    • HEPA Dust Extraction
    • Sawing Equipment
    • Polishing Equipment
    • Trowel Blades & Pans
    • Concrete Hand Tools
    • Hardeners, Sealers & Densifiers
  • Manufacturers
  • FAQs
    • OmniSil Densifier FAQs
    • Trowel Blades & Float Pans FAQs
    • Concrete Surface Preparation FAQs
    • Concrete Sawing Equipment FAQs
    • Suggest a New FAQ
  • Contact
  • Español

OmniSil Densifier FAQs

a

What is concrete?

Concrete is a mixture of portland cement, aggregate (sand or rock), and water. Combining portland cement and water causes a chemical reaction called hydration that hardens the cement paste and binds the aggregates into a sort of artificial stone.

Category: Densifiers
Back to Top
Permalink
a

How is concrete formed?

Hydration produces calcium-silicate-hydrates (CSH) crystals that make concrete hard. Excess water in the mix eventually evaporates, leaving behind tiny pores where the water previously took up space.

A by-product of this reaction is calcium hydroxide (Ca[Oh]2), also known as lime. Lime adds no structural value to concrete. Lime born by water can move through the slab and become efflorescence. It is the “dusting” that occurs on concrete that has not been densified.

Category: Densifiers
Back to Top
Permalink
a

What is densifying?

Densification is the process of permanently closing pores in the top layer of the slab. Silica added to concrete surface reacts with available calcium hydroxide and produce additional CSH crystals that permanently bond to existing CSH, filling the microscopic pores. The surface is less porous, denser and harder. One of the original uses of densifying was to eliminate “dusting” by tying up lime.

Category: Densifiers
Back to Top
Permalink
a

Is there a difference in densifiers?

The biggest difference is the method by which silica is delivered to the calcium hydroxide. Originally, alkali-metal compounds called “silicates” were used: sodium, potassium, and more recently, lithium-silicate. This older technology works but has many drawbacks for contractor and owner:

  • high pH levels of working materials (most greater than pH 11)
  • high alkaline surface residues
  • potential for whiting on the surface that is difficult to remove
  • high viscosity requiring time-consuming scrubbing to achieve penetration
  • labor-intensive application and rinsing
  • extensive delays for dwell times and drying times
  • disposal of hazardous slurries creates environmental issues on the job site
Category: Densifiers
Back to Top
Permalink
a

How is OmniSil Densifier different?

OmniSil Densifier is colloidal silica, not a silicate. It is refined nano-particles of highly pure silica suspended in solution. By contrast, silicates include stabilizing agents (sodium or potassium), which actually impede silica reacting with the lime. Colloidal silica is delivered more efficiently to the lime, allowing CSH to be formed quickly and more completely, with less work.

OmniSil Densifier’s superior efficiency means it is far faster and easier to apply than silicates, radically reducing labor costs and saving money overall on the densifying job.

Characteristics of OmniSil Densifier

  • Low viscosity, allowing quick penetration of the surface
  • Quick reaction time, within 1-2 minutes
  • Zero potential for whiting
  • Does NOT contribute to alkali-silica-reaction (ASR) which can cause swelling and cracking
  • Low pH of 9
  • NO high alkali surface residue
  • NO rinsing required
  • NO volatile organic compounds (VOC)
  • Consistent 3-5 nm size particles

OmniSil Densifier is the most efficient way to densify, harden, and increase abrasion-resistance of concrete surfaces. OmniSil ships as a concentrate, reducing shipping costs. OmniSil offers you a faster, cleaner, greener and more profitable way to densify concrete.

Category: Densifiers
Back to Top
Permalink

Primary Sidebar

Our FAQs Pages

  • FAQs
  • OmniSil Densifier FAQs
  • Trowel Blades & Float Pans FAQs
  • Concrete Surface Preparation FAQs
  • Concrete Sawing Equipment FAQs
  • Suggest a New FAQ

Footer

Address

InterConex, Inc.
10220 W. State Road 84, #8
Davie, FL 33324 USA

Communication

Telephone: 954-370-1305
FAX: 954-370-1307

Hours of Operation

Monday - Friday
8 AM - 5 PM (Eastern Time)

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Archive
  • Español

© 2008–2025 by InterConex, Inc. All rights reserved · Log in
Website Development by NetBizWeb