Blog on UHPC
Intro
Ultra-High Performance Concrete or UHPC is a type of concrete that has steadily grown in
popularity due to its increased durability and strength over traditional concrete. The US Army
Corps of Engineers first used UHPC in the 1980’s, but it wasn’t until 2000 that it became
commercially available in the US. Since then, more professionals, including PCI precast
producers, have been using UHPC in projects ranging from bridges to buildings.
What is UHPC?
UHPC is characterized by several things including ultra-high compressive strength, high
pre-cracking and post-cracking tensile strength, and enhanced durability due to high density and
discontinuous port structure. While there are numerous advantages that UHPC brings to
projects that will be covered later in this article, the overall benefit of UHPC is the elimination of
reinforcing steel and the material’s ability to self-compact.
UHPC is made by combining portland cement, supplementary cementitious materials, reactive
powers, limestone/quartz, fine sand, water reducers, and water. Fibers are included in the mix to
help provide the strength and durability that UHPC is known for. Fibers can range from
brass-coated thin wire to glass fibers mainly used for architectural applications.
UHPC can come in a prepackaged mixture or as local material-based mixtures. Prepackaged
UHPC mixtures have several benefits including more selective raw materials, assured batching
consistency, and reduced batching times. UHPC made from local materials has slightly different
benefits such as lower cost and the ability to be tailored to project needs, but it requires local
expertise and verification testing.
What are the benefits?
UHPC’s durability has been extensively tested and it has been found to respond exceedingly
well to extreme conditions that standard concrete struggles with. UHPC’s testing has been
completed in three main areas and includes:
● Freeze/thaw resistance: Testing has shown UHPC retained 100% of its material
properties after 600 thaw/freeze cycles.
● Chloride permeability: Testing has shown UHPC has extremely low chloride migration,
less than 10% of normal concrete.
● Abrasion resistance: Testing has shown UHPC has 2x the abrasion resistance of normal
concrete.
Aside from its durability benefits, UHPC brings a host of other advantages to projects. UHPC
can be produced using local materials which reduces its cost. Overall, UHPC is also a lighter
material per foot which results in less expensive shipping and spans can be designed for longer
lengths. UHPC isn’t restricted to structural precast components; it can be designed for
architectural cladding as well. Best of all, because of UHPC’s durability, it has about double the
lifespan of standard concrete which makes it a better choice for the environment in the long run.
Cor-Tuf, a PCI Associate member of FPCA, has created and tested their own UHPC mixture
and provides precast components to the Florida region. Here is a video they created that shows
multiple tests of their UHPC piling and demonstrates just how durable and strong UHPC
components can be.