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HS Code |
114977 |
| Product Name | JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin |
| Appearance | Translucent liquid |
| Chemical Type | Acrylic copolymer |
| Solids Content | 44.5% |
| Ph | 8.5 |
| Viscosity | 250 mPa·s |
| Molecular Weight | High |
| Glass Transition Temperature Tg | 33°C |
| Density | 1.05 g/cm³ |
| Mfft | 18°C |
| Film Forming Temperature | Low |
| Application | Waterborne coatings |
| Voc Content | <1% |
| Neutralizing Agent | Ammonia |
| Water Resistance | Good |
As an accredited JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.
| Packing | JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin is typically packaged in 200 kg blue plastic drums with secure lids and product labeling. |
| Container Loading (20′ FCL) | Container Loading (20′ FCL): JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin typically loads 16MT (drums) or 20 IBCs per 20′ FCL container. |
| Shipping | JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin is shipped in tightly sealed, chemically resistant containers, typically drums or IBCs, to prevent contamination and evaporation. The product should be stored and transported at temperatures above freezing, away from direct sunlight and incompatible chemicals, in accordance with local regulations and the manufacturer’s safety guidelines. |
| Storage | JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin should be stored in tightly closed containers, in a cool, dry, and well-ventilated area. Protect from freezing and direct sunlight. Recommended storage temperature is between 5°C and 35°C. Avoid exposure to extreme temperatures and contamination. Always keep container upright and secure to prevent leaks. Follow all safety and handling guidelines as specified in the Safety Data Sheet (SDS). |
| Shelf Life | JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin has a shelf life of 12 months from date of manufacture when stored unopened and properly. |
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Viscosity Grade: JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin with low viscosity grade is used in high-speed flexographic ink formulations, where it ensures excellent printability and smooth flow characteristics. Particle Size: JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin with fine particle size is used in paper coating applications, where it achieves uniform coverage and enhances surface smoothness. Molecular Weight: JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin with optimized molecular weight is used in overprint varnishes, where it provides superior film formation and gloss. Purity (%): JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin with high purity (≥98%) is used in food packaging inks, where it minimizes contamination risks and meets regulatory standards. Glass Transition Temperature: JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin with a glass transition temperature of ~45°C is used in heat-resistant coatings, where it delivers improved thermal stability and block resistance. pH Value: JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin with controlled pH value is used in aqueous adhesive formulations, where it enhances formulation stability and compatibility. Solids Content: JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin with 45% solids content is used in industrial wood coatings, where it ensures rapid film build and reduced drying times. Stability Temperature: JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin stable up to 60°C is used in outdoor signage inks, where it maintains performance under elevated storage or processing temperatures. |
Competitive JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.
For samples, pricing, or more information, please contact us at +8615651039172 or mail to sales9@bouling-chem.com.
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Tel: +8615651039172
Email: sales9@bouling-chem.com
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At our manufacturing facility, every drum of JONCRYL 2570 Waterborne Acrylic Resin represents a carefully controlled process—from raw material selection to polymerization, filtration, and packaging. We approach each batch through the lens of experience, knowing which small variances in emulsion stability or particle size distribution can send ripples through a customer's finished coating. The guiding principle remains straightforward: deliver a resin that helps formulators solve recurring field challenges without compromising environmental requirements.
JONCRYL 2570 carries the straightforward quality that formulators gravitate toward. Our technical team maintains a solids content and pH that resist drift between lots. The specific resin backbone supports a balance of gloss, durability, and recoatability. Viscosity stays steady, which is important during both high-speed production runs and slower, hands-on mixing. Years of upgrades in our reactor controls and emulsification equipment contribute directly to the long-term consistency prized by returning customers.
This resin supports waterborne paints and coatings that must meet ever-tighter VOC targets while still performing on tricky substrates or in demanding traffic zones. In practical terms, this translates to predictable film formation even under marginal drying conditions. The particle size selected for JONCRYL 2570 avoids both mudcracking in thick applications and excessive bleeding through porous surfaces, an advantage that has emerged through years of feedback from both high-volume manufacturers and smaller job shops. While we have expanded our waterborne range, customers in industrial wood finishes, metal primers, and wall coatings continue to prefer this grade for its reliable build and sheen.
The bulk of our JONCRYL 2570 finds its way into waterborne enamels, architectural paints, and industrial maintenance coatings. Customers who run automated spray lines appreciate the resin’s stability at a range of pH and shear, while smaller custom blenders comment on its compatibility with common pigment dispersions and fillers. Our resin supports both air-dry and force-dry applications, a flexibility that allows end-users to adjust cure profiles based on jobsite conditions.
Refinishers working on interior wood substrates get value from JONCRYL 2570’s blocking resistance. The resin’s backbone resists tack even at elevated humidity, so freshly coated cabinet doors and trim pieces can be stacked or handled sooner. In metal coatings, shop managers note reduced flash rust compared to some alternative binders, especially on blast-cleaned mild steel. This feature did not arise by accident. Over dozens of pilot and commercial runs, we have honed surfactant packages and molecular weight profiles to hit that sweet spot between open-time and water resistance.
For contractors and painters focused on odor or regulatory limits, the formulation partners well with low-odor additives and does not depend on solvent for flow. The push toward “greener” building interiors—schools, hospitals, commercial spaces—places fresh pressure on resin suppliers. JONCRYL 2570 steps in as a backbone for zero-VOC formulations that still need to bond to drywall, wood, plaster, or concrete. Unlike brittle or powdery binders that emerged in the early waterborne days, the film produced by this resin stands up well to repeated cleaning and abrasion tests in our lab and in jobsite feedback over several years.
Quality claims fly around in the polymer industry, and commercial users want practical differences, not just lab numbers. With JONCRYL 2570, customers notice that tint strength holds steady after storage—even after pigment pastes or fillers are introduced. Distributors tell us that they get fewer returns and customer complaints related to shelf instability or unexpected settling. We attribute this to our focus on maintaining emulsion integrity right from monomer selection through temperature control in storage tanks.
Resins can look similar on paper, but run them through a spray rig and minor formulation issues rear up quickly. A high-flow resin may flood vertical surfaces or sag, especially during humid days; if gloss is too high, minor surface flaws become visible, requiring extra surface prep. The balanced flow and leveling of JONCRYL 2570 let operators get by with standard tip sizes and application rates, without reworking parts or panels.
We have kept a close eye on block resistance after exposure to heat and pressure. Cabinet shops, for instance, share their line speed data with us, so we see real-world benefits of reduced stickiness and less part-on-part marking. In decorative paints, especially those in high-touch zones, softening and dirt pick-up used to dog waterborne acrylics. Our latest data show JONCRYL 2570 films shrug off these issues better than several conventional competitors, based on black heel mark and cleaning tests run on finished paint films by both our lab technicians and select customers.
Our plant runs continuous sampling as polymerization proceeds. Viscosity targets are kept within narrow windows, because we know that a small out-of-spec batch can throw off pigment dispersion and film build at the customer’s site. We store blending logs for every lot; this allows us to troubleshoot on the rare occasions a customer reports sagging or long open time. Paint makers benefit from these checks because they can run shorter QC holds while blending or packing their own products.
We have improved our surfactant systems based on in-field observations. Years ago, one wood coating customer flagged minor foam retention under forced drying. This led us to tweak the manufacturing sequence, reducing persistent microbubbles that can trap air in critical topcoats. No amount of laboratory simulation can anticipate every customer application, and the dialogue with actual production supervisors has proven irreplaceable in shaping the product’s evolution.
Tech teams at larger plants appreciated our batch-to-batch tracking during scale-up transitions. When new environmental rules or sourcing issues press a quick formulation change, JONCRYL 2570 remains predictable, easing reformulation headaches. Small or mid-sized customers get quick answers from our on-site chemists, often before the request leaves the lab. This emphasis on boots-on-the-ground troubleshooting comes from our own experience managing batch rollouts with tight customer timelines at stake.
Not every resin resists yellowing and chalking under sunlight and heat. Our internal UV testing, complemented by exposure panels set up on the plant roof, shows steady color retention over time. Field reports from building repaint contractors lend further evidence: after two summers on south-facing siding jobs, the films made with our resin have stayed cleaner and brighter. This performance frees up paint makers to guarantee exterior finishes with more confidence, and that reputation sticks with both the paint brand and the upstream resin provider.
JONCRYL 2570 works at a variety of pigment volume concentrations, so formulators can dial in gloss or sheen targets for flat, eggshell, or semi-gloss grades with fewer resin swaps. This keeps inventory costs down for paint shops and assures builders that touch-ups or repaints will blend as expected. On factory lines handling steel or aluminum, shop personnel highlight shorter dry-to-handle times, which helps them hit packing or turnaround benchmarks without costly overtime or unexpected rejects.
The current drive for lower environmental impact has intensified. Industrial users receive constant pressure to hit VOC and HAPs limits associated with both product use and off-gassing during manufacturing or installation. JONCRYL 2570 acts as a backbone in products that meet current green building standards—without loading up on performance additives or specialty coalescents that drive costs up over time.
Plant staff work closely with formulators to cut fugitive emissions at every step, from monomer selection to blend additives. For wood finishers operating near schools or hospitals, this translates into cleaner indoor air without resorting to high-odor solvents or masking fragrances. We track emission data in our own plant to validate what customers see: air quality impacts remain well below regulatory triggers, and operators in our filling lines confirm less eye and skin irritation compared to older waterborne or solvent-based resins. This real-world validation counts for more than promotional claims—it reflects the actual plant safety climate where our own staff spend their days.
We have long viewed our job as collaborative. Buyers and production managers send photos and samples when things don’t go right. These honest exchanges keep us grounded and ensure that improvements to JONCRYL 2570 don’t get lost in the shuffle of marketing trends. Our R&D staff make regular visits to customer sites, rolling up their sleeves next to production operators or application crews. Whether it’s correcting early blush on trim pieces, eliminating residue on spray filters, or troubleshooting unexpected loss of gloss on bathroom walls, our approach comes from years on actual plant floors—not just from desk-side theory.
These field relationships often lead to process tweaks: changes to stabilization time in holding tanks, adjustments to polymerization heat curves, or on-the-fly guidance about optimal antifoam dosage at the customer site. The practical value of this resin was not designed in a vacuum. Instead, it reflects years of back-and-forth with people running shifts under pressure, aiming to hit both quality and budget goals day after day.
Market shocks can send resin prices or lead times into chaos. By keeping key raw material contracts under long-term agreements and investing in redundancy within our own supply chain, we have weathered disruptions with fewer allocation issues. Past years have taught all of us that reliability of supply matters as much as intrinsic product quality, especially for lines that run through several tons of acrylic every week.
We have cross-trained our staff in both production and application support, minimizing finger-pointing when new regulations or raw material shifts press for fast adaptation. Decisions at the blending bench communicate directly to plant operators, so issues get caught before hundreds of liters leave the floor. For complex jobs, such as matching new pigment dispersions or transitioning from solventborne to waterborne systems, access to real process knowledge adds value that purely transactional sellers cannot match.
Customers always factor cost per kilogram into their choices, but our long-term buyers often share that the true value of JONCRYL 2570 emerges over many production cycles. Start-up waste and off-grade production drop as operators gain trust in batch homogeneity and performance. With fewer forced reworks, line downtime falls, and the headaches from mid-batch troubleshooting ease up. This benefit echoes at multiple points in the supply chain: from the buyer focused on landed cost, to the operator counting how many drums remain in inventory, to the contractor who stands behind every paint job handed over to a building owner.
Consistency builds reputation. Technical benefits aside, using a resin that resists daily variability keeps product launches and routine production on track. Over several decades, we find that partners who share feedback and bring us into their process see measurable returns, through lowered complaints, repeat business, and fewer warranty calls from the field.
There is satisfaction in tracking a resin through its lifecycle: raw monomers turning into stable latex, filtered, packed, shipped, and finally applied to a surface—be it a kitchen cabinet, a hospital hallway, or a newly built school. The difference JONCRYL 2570 brings does not sit in abstract property tables. It shows up in the predictability of running production shifts, the confidence to promise deadlines to installers, and the peace of mind in meeting both end-user demands and tightening environmental codes.
Our perspective comes from making these large-scale batches, troubleshooting the unexpected, and listening to the sharp-eyed plant operators and field technicians who rely on predictable results. The lessons learned show up both in the current formulation and the way we approach each new customer challenge. JONCRYL 2570 continues to reflect this blend of process discipline and on-the-ground problem-solving—qualities that matter as much now as they did at the start of the waterborne coatings movement.