from a recent german study about testing the assimilation of various forms of silicic acid & agri products on winegrape leaves as a method to thwart PM:
Silicon concentration [mg Si/g TS] "old leaves" "middle leaves" ab c control c Greemax KSi KSi+Greemax c Aerosil cc Aerosil+Greemax Fig. 4.3: Influence of Greemax, potash water glass (“KSi”) and Aerosilsoil application on the Si concentration in the “old” and “middle” leaves of vine cuttings of the Variety Bacchus after 47 days in the pot experiment (mean values n=5, different letters symbolize significant differences within a leaf fraction [Tukey test, p≤0.05]; error bars indicate the standard deviation from the mean) Greemax® caused compared to the "control" variant Significantly higher Mn concentration in the leaf tissue of the “medium leaf” fraction if it was not applied together with silicates (“KSi”, Aerosil®) (Fig. 4.4).
the KSi had best results, this was done in pot, 5*5 plants repeatedly.
IIRC the potass sil dissociates partially in water to form silicic acid.
the study says it has to be applied via the soil, otherwise (foliar) it will not make it inside the plant but instead form an outside layer which actually is also helpful vs pathogen infestation.
but it has many other positive functions esp. to help the plant shift nutrients around that are usually not very mobile, Mn e.g.
the study acknowledges dicots usually dont accumulate it but that's why they tested these other products (chelating agents etc) if then, it still can help.
the waterglass pot sil fared best, some agents even hurt the plant.
older plant material had always significantly higher concentrations of Si than new, it's because it's taken in rather slowly/steadily, can't go overboard with Si, but the K is there as well
Control plant got K Sulfate instead to make K levels even...
OPUS Version 3.2.1
opus.uni-hohenheim.de