The performance behind UHPC starts at the particle level. This is the technical reference for mix constituents, performance parameters, and applicable standards.
UHPC's performance is not achieved by simply adding more cement. It's achieved through engineered particle packing — optimizing the gradation of every constituent to produce the highest possible density before fiber reinforcement is introduced. The result is a matrix with a discontinuous pore structure, a water-to-cementitious ratio of 0.16–0.20 (versus 0.40–0.60 for conventional concrete), and mechanical properties that represent a different category of material behavior.
| Constituent | Typical Quantity | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Portland Cement | ~1,200 lb/yd³ (710 kg/m³) | Primary binder; high fineness required |
| Silica Fume | ~250 lb/yd³ (148 kg/m³) | Pozzolanic reactivity; pore refinement |
| Supplementary Cementitious Material | ~250 lb/yd³ | Fly ash, ground slag, or silica powder; workability and sustainability |
| Fine Quartz Sand | ~1,700 lb/yd³ (1,010 kg/m³) | Max grain size 0.03"; high hardness; gradation critical |
| Steel Fibers | ~265 lb/yd³ (~2% by volume) | Tensile ductility; post-crack load transfer |
| High-Range Water Reducer (HRWR) | Per admixture dosage | Workability at ultra-low w/b ratio |
| Water | w/b = 0.16–0.20 | Minimal; just sufficient for hydration and flow |
Steel fibers are the component that converts UHPC from a strong-but-brittle material into a ductile one. The fibers are typically brass-coated steel wire, cut to 10–20mm lengths with diameters of 0.15–0.25mm. Aspect ratios (length/diameter) generally range 50–100, and tensile strength exceeds 2,000 MPa. Fiber volume fraction of 1–3% is typical; 2% is the most common specification for facade applications. Fiber orientation significantly affects performance — in panel production, vibration and flow direction can be optimized to align fibers preferentially in the primary load direction.
| Parameter | UHPC Value | Reference Standard |
|---|---|---|
| Compressive Strength | >21.7 ksi (150 MPa) | FHWA; ACI 239 |
| Tensile Strength (post-crack) | >0.72 ksi (5 MPa) | FHWA |
| First-Crack Flexural Strength | >1.5 ksi | PCI (ASTM C1609) |
| Peak Flexural Strength | >2.0 ksi with significant deflection | PCI (ASTM C1609) |
| Modulus of Elasticity | 6,500–9,000 ksi (45–62 GPa) | Varies by mix |
| Chloride Penetration Depth | <1mm | vs. 15–25mm conventional |
| Water/Cementitious Ratio | 0.16–0.25 | General UHPC class |
| Freeze-Thaw Resistance | Excellent — near-zero permeability | ASTM C666 |
UHPC curing method significantly affects performance, and the choice depends on project requirements and production context.
Temperature 20°C, relative humidity ≥95%. Achieves good baseline properties and is practical for in-situ or non-precast applications. Suitable when steam equipment is unavailable and schedule tolerates longer strength gain curves.
90°C for 48–72 hours. Accelerates hydration, increases early strength, and shortens production cycles. The standard approach for precast UHPC facades — it enables faster formwork turnover and more consistent panel-to-panel performance. Most UHPC facade precasters operate steam curing chambers as standard equipment.
250–400°C at 20–50 MPa pressure. Achieves the highest possible performance but requires complex, expensive equipment. Used primarily for specialized components where maximum strength is critical. Not typical for facade panel production.
UHPC specification is still evolving — there is no single universal standard that governs all applications. Specifiers should reference the following:
For facade applications: Material properties are only half the specification equation. See how these parameters translate to panel design, connection systems, and installation — UHPC Facade Panels →
How it's made: For how curing methods affect production scheduling, color consistency, and lead times, see UHPC Manufacturing & Panel Production →
How material properties translate to design flexibility, connection systems, and project types.