Reinforcement Calculation Calculator
Longitudinal Reinforcement · A_s Calculation · Load Capacity · Minimum Reinforcement EC2 · Reinforced Concrete Design
Reinforcement Calculator
Formulas & References
A_s = M_Ed / (f_yd · z) [cm²]
M_Ed = Design moment [kNm]; f_yd = Design yield strength of steel [MPa]; z = Lever arm [mm]
M_Rd = A_s · f_yd · z [kNm]
M_Rd = Design moment capacity
z ≈ 0.9 · d [mm]
d = Effective depth; precise: z = d − 0.4·x (x = depth of compression zone)
A_s,min = max(0.26 · f_ctm · b · d / f_yk , 0.0013 · b · d) [mm²]
f_ctm = Mean tensile strength of concrete; f_yk = Characteristic steel yield strength
Steel Grades & Strength Classes
| B500B | f_yd = 174 MPa (ε_ud ≥ 5%), Modern standard |
| B500A | f_yd = 200 MPa (ε_ud ≥ 2.5%) |
| B450 | f_yd = 435 MPa (older, phasing out) |
• Design moment M_Ed = 150 kNm
• Width b = 300 mm, Height h = 650 mm, d = 600 mm
• Steel B500B: f_yd = 174 MPa
• Lever arm z = 0.9 · 600 = 540 mm
• A_s = 150·10⁶ / (174 · 540) = 1592 mm² ≈ 16 cm²
• Selection: 4Ø20 = 12.57 cm² or 5Ø20 = 15.71 cm²
Technical Background
Reinforced Concrete Design – Reinforcement Calculation to EC2
Reinforcement calculation is the core process of reinforced concrete design: it determines the required amount and arrangement of steel reinforcement to resist moments, shear forces, and other stresses. The fundamental equation for longitudinal reinforcement in the bending zone is:
Lever Arm z – The Central Concept
The lever arm z is the vertical distance between the resultant compression force (concrete) and the tension force (steel). It depends on:
- Effective depth d (distance from compression face to centroid of tension reinforcement)
- Depth of compression zone x (depends on moment, section, concrete and steel grade)
- Approximation: z ≈ 0.9 · d is sufficient for most applications
Design Yield Strength f_yd
The design yield strength is derived from the characteristic steel yield strength f_yk with safety factor γ_s = 1.15:
Example: B500 (f_yk = 500 MPa) → f_yd = 500 / 1.15 ≈ 435 MPa (old) or f_yd = 174–200 MPa (modern with EC2 reduction)
Minimum Reinforcement A_s,min (EC2 Section 9.2)
To control cracking and ensure ductile failure, EC2 mandates a minimum reinforcement:
Where:
- f_ctm = Mean axial tensile strength of concrete ≈ 0.30 · f_ck^(2/3) [MPa]
- 0.26 · f_ctm / f_yk = Criterion for crack width control
- 0.0013 · b · d = Geometric minimum reinforcement ratio (approx. 0.13% of section area)
Typical Reinforcement Ratio Ranges
| Reinforcement Ratio ρ | Range [%] | Application |
|---|---|---|
| ρ_min | 0.13–0.30 | Minimum reinforcement per EC2, crack width control |
| Typical | 0.30–1.0 | Normal columns, beams with moderate loads |
| Highly Stressed | 1.0–3.0 | High-load columns, foundations |
| ρ_max (EC2) | 4.0 | Maximum reinforcement to prevent over-reinforcement |
Common Reinforcement Bars and Areas (in cm²)
| Diameter | Area [cm²] |
|---|---|
| Ø8 | 0.50 |
| Ø10 | 0.79 |
| Ø12 | 1.13 |
| Ø16 | 2.01 |
| Ø20 | 3.14 |
| Ø25 | 4.91 |
| Ø32 | 8.04 |
| 4Ø20 | 12.57 |
| 5Ø20 | 15.71 |
| 6Ø20 | 18.85 |
• Iterative determination of compression zone depth x and lever arm z
• Shear reinforcement and torsion checks
• Crack width and deflection verification
• Treatment of concentrated loads and cantilevers
• Constructive detailing rules (bar diameter, spacing, lap lengths)
For complex or high-load structures, consult a structural engineer or use FEM software!
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