Concrete Mix Design Calculator

Mix Recipe · w/c Ratio · Cement Content · Compressive Strength · Consistency Class

Concrete Mix Calculator


Target strength; typical: C20/25, C25/30, C30/37, C40/50
Cement clinker content and early/late strength development
Determines the water content in concrete

Formulas & References

Abrams' Law (w/c → Compressive Strength):
f_c = A · f_c0 · 2^(−B·w/c) [MPa]
Simplified: f_c ≈ f_c0 / (1 + 2.5·w/c) or f_c = k·(f_c0 − f_c0·w/c)
Concrete Mix Recipe (Batch Calculation):
m_Water = w/c · m_Cement
m_Aggregate = m_Concrete − m_Cement − m_Water − m_Air
d_max → Water content (ACI 211, BS 8110, DIN 1045-1)
Defined by consistency class (slump) and maximum aggregate size
Minimum Cement Content (Exposure Class):
c_min [kg/m³] per EN 206 / ACI 318
X0: 160 | XC1: 240 | XC2: 260 | XC3: 280 | XC4: 300 | XS: 320–340 | XF: 300–320

Reference Table: Cement Strength
CEM I 32.5 Rf_c28 = 32.5 MPa, early: 2d ≥ 10, 7d ≥ 20
CEM I 42.5 Nf_c28 = 42.5 MPa, normal: 2d 10–20, 7d 20–40
CEM I 42.5 Rf_c28 = 42.5 MPa, rapid: 7d ≥ 30
CEM I 52.5 Nf_c28 = 52.5 MPa, high: 2d ≥ 20, 7d ≥ 40
Example (Normal Concrete C25/30):
• Cement: 320 kg/m³ (CEM I 42.5 N)
• w/c ratio: 0.55 → Water: 176 L/m³
• Aggregate: ~1800 kg/m³ (sand + gravel)
• Compressive strength 28d: ~30 MPa


Technical Background

Concrete Mix Design – Fundamentals

Concrete mix design is the engineering discipline of determining the correct proportion of cement, water, sand, gravel, and optional admixtures to produce concrete with desired properties: strength, durability, workability, and economy.

w/c Ratio (Water-to-Cement Ratio)

The w/c ratio is the ratio of water to cement and is the most critical parameter for concrete quality:

  • Low w/c (0.3–0.45): Higher strength, better durability, but poor workability
  • High w/c (0.60–0.75): Easy placement, but lower strength and durability
  • Optimal (0.45–0.60): Balance between strength and workability
Abrams' Law

The famous Abrams' Law states that concrete compressive strength is inversely proportional to the w/c ratio:

f_c = f_c0 / (1 + K·w/c)
where K ≈ 2–2.5 depending on cement type
Consistency Classes (DIN EN 12350-2)
Class Slump [cm] Application
F1 Stiff 0–1 Foundations, rigid concrete (shot concrete)
F2 Plastic 2–4 Road concrete, parking lots, industrial floors
F3 Soft 5–9 Columns, deck slabs, walls (standard)
F4 Flowing 10–15 High-rise, pump concrete, surface finish required
F5 Very Fluid 16–20 Shot concrete, self-compacting concrete (SCC)
Exposure Classes (EN 206 / ACI 318)

The exposure class describes environmental conditions and determines minimum cement content, w/c limit, and concrete cover:

  • X0: No corrosion (indoor, dry) → c_min = 160 kg/m³
  • XC: Carbonation-induced corrosion (humidity) → c_min = 240–300 kg/m³
  • XS: Chloride-induced corrosion (seawater) → c_min = 320–340 kg/m³
  • XF: Freeze-thaw cycling → c_min = 300–320 kg/m³ + entrained air 3–5%
Concrete Compressive Strength Classification (EN 206 / ACI 318)
Class Strength [MPa] Application
C12/15 15–18 Lean concrete, slopes, minor components
C20/25 25–30 Standard for simple structures, roads
C25/30 30–37 Standard concrete for high-rise buildings
C30/37 37–45 Bridges, parking structures, higher demands
C40/50 50–60 High-strength concrete, tunnels, hydraulic structures
C50/60 and higher ≥60 Ultra-high-strength concrete, special applications
Disclaimer: This is a simplified calculation. For professional concrete mix design per ACI 211 or EN 206 requirements:
• Precise aggregate grading and bulk densities
• Batching proportions and compatibility
• Admixture dosages (fly ash, silica fume)
• Placement losses and curing effects
• Temperature effects on early strength
Consult a concrete specialist or cement supplier for final mix designs!
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