Slippery Polished Concrete
Go ahead, call me silly or under-informed, but I have always found it ridiculous that the same core component used in creating a long-lasting, durable, heat-resistant lubricant would be the choice of ingredients for concrete floor densifiers - and then the industry...
wonders why they are perpetually dealing with slippery concrete floors.
May we suggest an alternative approach?
The restoration of concrete is generally divided into 3 processes: GRIND, HONE, and POLISH - as though it ended there. Not so. There must be a provision for MAINTAIN.
With products from Perma, you can grind and hone to your heart's content, but instead of using a Lithium Densifier, consider using Perma All-Seal. This product will fill the pores with binding, waterborne urethane, without leaving any surface film. You may then press on to the polishing phase.
Then, as you are polishing, begin the same regiment of cleaning that will take you into the maintenance phase, with Perma All-Shine. This product uses microscopic silica to finish the densification process, leveling out the substrate without creating a surface coating. The more you clean the greater the density, the more you polish the better the gloss - BUT what you also gain with All-Shine is SCOF (Static Coefficient of Friction).
The results will be concrete floors that have a higher gloss, a shorter restoration time, and an infinitely longer life cycle.