Fiber-Reinforced Concrete

Fiber-reinforced concrete (FRC) is a composite material in which short discrete fibers are distributed throughout a concrete matrix to improve its mechanical and durability performance. This page covers the material classifications, performance mechanisms, applicable industry standards, and the conditions under which FRC is specified over conventional concrete. It serves as a reference for contractors, specifiers, structural engineers, and procurement professionals navigating the concrete services sector — additional contractor providers are available through the National Concrete Authority provider network.

Definition and scope

Fiber-reinforced concrete is defined by ACI 544.1R (Report on Fiber-Reinforced Concrete, American Concrete Institute) as concrete containing "dispersed, randomly oriented fibers." The scope of the material category is broad: fibers may be metallic, synthetic, glass, or natural in origin, and their addition modifies the post-crack behavior of the hardened matrix rather than substantially increasing compressive strength.

The four primary fiber classifications recognized in ACI 544 are:

Hybrid FRC — combining two fiber types within a single mix — is addressed in ACI 544.5R and is used when performance requirements span multiple failure modes (e.g., both early plastic shrinkage control and structural toughness).

How it works

Conventional concrete fails in tension through crack initiation and propagation. Once a crack opens, unreinforced concrete offers no resistance to its growth. Fibers alter this behavior through a mechanism called crack bridging: as a crack begins to open, fibers spanning the crack plane resist separation by transferring tensile stress across the fracture surface. This extends the post-crack load-bearing capacity of the section.

The quantitative measure of this performance is toughness, expressed as the area under the load-deflection curve in standardized beam tests. ASTM C1609 (Standard Test Method for Flexural Performance of Fiber-Reinforced Concrete) is the dominant test protocol in the United States; it measures residual strength factors at deflection levels of L/600 and L/150, where L is the span length.

Fiber orientation is random in conventionally cast FRC. In spray applications such as shotcrete, orientation is partially influenced by the casting direction, and ASTM C1399 governs that testing regime. Mix design must account for fiber workability impacts: steel fibers at 80 lb/yd³ typically reduce slump by 2 to 4 inches relative to the base mix without fiber, requiring water reducer or high-range water reducer (HRWR) adjustment per ACI 544.3R.

Common scenarios

FRC appears across a defined range of construction applications where crack control, impact resistance, or fatigue performance drives the specification decision:

Permitting and inspection requirements for FRC installations are governed by the authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) under the International Building Code (IBC), with material acceptance subject to ACI 318-19 provisions for structural concrete. For non-structural crack-control applications, AHJ discretion over fiber type and dosage is broader, but mix submittals and batch plant certification remain standard requirements on commercial projects. Contractors working across the concrete services sector can reference the provider network purpose and scope for orientation on how the sector is organized.

Decision boundaries

The selection of FRC over conventional reinforcement — or as a supplement to it — follows identifiable decision criteria:

Condition Conventional Reinforcement FRC

Structural tension (beams, columns) Deformed rebar per ACI 318 Not a substitute; supplemental only

Slab crack control (non-structural) WWF or deformed bar FRC competitive or preferred

Thin-shell architectural elements Impractical GFRC standard

Impact and abrasion resistance Limited SFRC preferred

Plastic shrinkage cracking No benefit Synthetic FRC at ≤1.5 lb/yd³

SFRC can function as the primary structural reinforcement in specific slab and tunnel applications under ACI 544.6R, but ACI 318-19 does not recognize fibers as a full substitute for deformed reinforcement in structural beams or columns without supplemental testing and AHJ approval. Safety-critical applications — including parking structures, bridges, and seismic zones — require licensed structural engineer review under applicable state professional engineer licensure laws regardless of fiber type.

The National Concrete Authority concrete providers provides contractor and service provider access organized by application type and geography, relevant to procurement decisions across the FRC application categories described above.

References