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Plastic Shrinkage Cracking Prevention – Complete Guide 2026
🧱 Concrete Cracking Guide 2026

Plastic Shrinkage Cracking Prevention

The complete professional guide to understanding, predicting, and preventing plastic shrinkage cracks in concrete

Master plastic shrinkage cracking prevention with the ACI 305 evaporation rate checker, step-by-step on-site protocols, windbreak and misting strategies, evaporation retarder application guides, and complete reference tables for 2026.

ACI 305 Risk Checker
All Prevention Methods
Site-Ready Protocol
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🧱 Plastic Shrinkage Cracking Prevention

Why evaporation rate is the single most critical variable to control during fresh concrete placement

✔ What Is Plastic Shrinkage Cracking?

Plastic shrinkage cracks occur while concrete is still in its plastic state — before final set — when the rate of surface evaporation exceeds the rate at which bleed water rises to replace it. As the surface dries faster than the interior, tensile stresses develop in the fresh concrete skin and, because the material has virtually no tensile strength at this stage, cracks form. These cracks are typically diagonal, parallel, or random in pattern and can penetrate the full slab depth.

✔ The ACI 305 Threshold

According to ACI 305R — Hot Weather Concreting, when the evaporation rate from the concrete surface reaches or exceeds 1.0 kg/m²/hr (0.20 lb/ft²/hr), precautionary measures are mandatory. At rates above 1.5 kg/m²/hr, extreme precautions including erecting windbreaks, applying evaporation retarder, and continuous fogging are all required simultaneously. The evaporation rate is driven by four variables: concrete temperature, air temperature, relative humidity, and wind speed.

✔ 2026 Prevention Essentials

Effective plastic shrinkage cracking prevention in 2026 relies on a three-tier approach: pre-placement planning (scheduling pours to avoid high-evaporation periods, pre-wetting sub-bases), active during-placement controls (windbreaks, fogging mist systems, evaporation retarder sprays), and immediate post-placement curing (wet hessian, plastic sheeting, curing compounds applied within minutes of final trowel). Missing any tier significantly increases crack risk even when the others are in place.

🌡️ Plastic Shrinkage Cracking Risk Checker

Enter site conditions to calculate evaporation rate and plastic shrinkage cracking risk level — based on ACI 305R 2026

Temperature of fresh concrete at time of placement
Ambient air temperature at the site
Ambient relative humidity at the site
Wind speed measured at 0.5 m above the slab surface
Evaporation Rate
kg/m²/hr (ACI 305R formula)
Risk Level
ACI 305 Threshold
1.0 kg/m²/hr
Margin to Threshold
Precautions

📋 Recommended Actions

Concrete Temp
Air Temp
Relative Humidity
Wind Speed
Required Action
Temperature of fresh concrete at placement
Ambient air temperature at the site
Ambient relative humidity at the site
Wind speed at 1.5 ft above the slab surface
Evaporation Rate
lb/ft²/hr (ACI 305R formula)
Risk Level
ACI 305 Threshold
0.20 lb/ft²/hr
Margin
Precautions

📋 Recommended Actions

Concrete Temp
Air Temp
Relative Humidity
Wind Speed
Required Action

Understanding Plastic Shrinkage Cracking Prevention

Plastic shrinkage cracks are formed in fresh concrete — typically within the first 1 to 8 hours after placement — before the concrete has developed any meaningful tensile strength. The mechanism is straightforward: bleed water normally migrates upward through the fresh mix and keeps the surface moist. When surface evaporation outpaces this bleed water supply, the surface concrete begins to dry and contract while the interior remains wet and restrained. The differential shrinkage creates tensile stresses that the paste-rich surface layer cannot resist.

Unlike drying shrinkage cracks (which form days or weeks after placement as the hardened concrete loses moisture), plastic shrinkage cracks can appear within minutes of the concrete surface losing its bleed water sheen. They often go unnoticed during the busy finishing phase and are only discovered after the concrete has hardened. By then, the cracks — which may be 1–3 mm wide and extend 50–150 mm deep — cannot be reversed. Effective plastic shrinkage cracking prevention therefore requires proactive monitoring of site conditions before and during the pour, not reactive intervention after cracks appear.

⚠️ Critical Warning — Do Not Wait for Cracks to Appear

Plastic shrinkage cracking prevention must begin before the first truck arrives on site. Once cracks appear in fresh concrete, they cannot be closed by re-trowelling — compressing a crack forces aggregate particles apart and leaves a permanent weakened plane. The only effective strategy is prevention. Check evaporation rate conditions using the tool above every 30 minutes during the pour on high-risk days.

🌡️ Plastic Shrinkage Cracking Risk Zones — ACI 305 Evaporation Rate

< 0.5 ✅ LOW RISK
kg/m²/hr
Standard practice
0.5–1.0 ⚠️ MODERATE
kg/m²/hr
Precautions recommended
1.0–1.5 ❌ HIGH RISK
kg/m²/hr
Precautions required
> 1.5 🚨 EXTREME
kg/m²/hr
Consider delaying pour

Risk zones based on ACI 305R evaporation rate thresholds — metric values (kg/m²/hr) — 2026 reference

The 5 Key Causes of Plastic Shrinkage Cracks

Plastic shrinkage cracking is ultimately caused by a single physical event — surface moisture loss exceeding bleed water supply — but five site-specific variables determine whether this event occurs and how severe it becomes. Understanding each variable is essential for effective plastic shrinkage cracking prevention on any project.

💨 Wind Speed

Wind is the most powerful accelerator of evaporation. Even a moderate breeze of 15–20 km/h can more than double the evaporation rate compared to calm conditions. On exposed sites — road slabs, airport aprons, open warehouse floors — wind speed should be measured at slab level, not at standard meteorological height, as ground-level wind is often significantly higher. Windbreaks are typically the single most effective plastic shrinkage cracking prevention measure on exposed sites.

🌡️ Concrete Temperature

Higher concrete temperatures increase the vapour pressure at the slab surface, directly raising evaporation rate. A concrete temperature of 35°C produces dramatically more surface evaporation than a 20°C mix under identical ambient conditions. Reducing concrete temperature by 5–8°C through ice substitution for mix water, shaded aggregate stockpiles, and chilled water can reduce evaporation rate by 20–35%, making it one of the most cost-effective plastic shrinkage cracking prevention strategies for hot weather concreting.

☀️ Air Temperature

High air temperature reduces the vapour pressure differential between the concrete surface and the ambient air, allowing more evaporation to occur. When air temperature exceeds concrete temperature — a common scenario in hot weather when the sun heats the air faster than it heats the concrete mix — evaporation rates can reach extreme levels within minutes of placement. Scheduling pours in the early morning or late afternoon hours is one of the simplest plastic shrinkage cracking prevention strategies available.

💧 Low Relative Humidity

Dry air — below 40–50% relative humidity — significantly increases the capacity of the atmosphere to absorb moisture from the concrete surface. In arid climates, desert regions, and air-conditioned interior environments, relative humidity below 20–30% can create critical evaporation rates even when wind and temperature are moderate. Humidity cannot easily be controlled on outdoor sites, making it a primary driver for scheduling decisions when conducting plastic shrinkage cracking prevention planning.

🔆 Solar Radiation

Direct sunlight heats the concrete surface, significantly increasing the surface temperature above air temperature and dramatically raising local evaporation rate. A concrete slab in direct summer sun can reach surface temperatures 10–15°C above air temperature within 30 minutes of placement. Shading freshly placed concrete using temporary fabric shade structures or scheduling pours to avoid peak solar hours (10:00–15:00) is an underutilised plastic shrinkage cracking prevention strategy.

🧱 Low Bleed Rate Mixes

Modern concrete mixes — particularly those with silica fume, fly ash, low water-to-cement ratios, or high-range water reducers — produce very little bleed water. While these admixtures improve long-term concrete quality, they also eliminate the natural "buffer" of surface bleed water that normally compensates for moderate evaporation. Low-bleed mixes require more aggressive and faster-acting plastic shrinkage cracking prevention measures than standard mixes, as the surface can lose its moist sheen within minutes of placement.

Plastic Shrinkage Cracking Prevention — ACI 305 Evaporation Rate Formula

The ACI 305R evaporation rate formula, originally developed by Menzel (1954) and refined in subsequent ACI committee updates, provides a reliable method for estimating evaporation rate from fresh concrete surfaces based on four measurable site parameters. This formula is the basis of the risk checker tool above and forms the technical foundation of all professional plastic shrinkage cracking prevention planning.

📐 ACI 305R Evaporation Rate Formula (Metric)

E = 5 × [(Tc + 18)^2.5 − r × (Ta + 18)^2.5] × (V + 4) × 10⁻⁶
Where: E = Evaporation rate (kg/m²/hr)
Tc = Concrete temperature (°C)
Ta = Air temperature (°C)
r = Relative humidity (decimal — e.g., 0.40 for 40% RH)
V = Wind speed (km/h) at 0.5 m above the slab surface
Threshold: E ≥ 1.0 kg/m²/hr → Precautions REQUIRED (ACI 305R)

💡 Important Note on the Formula

The ACI 305R formula assumes no direct solar radiation input and standard atmospheric pressure. On bright sunny days, actual evaporation rates at the slab surface may be 20–40% higher than the formula predicts because solar radiation heats the surface concrete beyond the measured air temperature. When direct sun is present, add a conservative safety margin and treat the calculated evaporation rate as a minimum, not a maximum estimate.

Step-by-Step Plastic Shrinkage Cracking Prevention Protocol

The following protocol integrates all three prevention tiers — pre-placement, during placement, and post-placement — into a structured on-site workflow. This approach aligns with the recommendations of ACI 305R, AS 3600, and the Concrete Institute of Australia's current 2026 practice notes for plastic shrinkage cracking prevention.

1

Pre-Pour Site Assessment (Day Before)

Obtain the next-day weather forecast including air temperature, relative humidity, wind speed, and solar conditions. Input the values into the evaporation rate checker above using your expected concrete placement temperature. If the calculated evaporation rate approaches or exceeds 0.75 kg/m²/hr, initiate contingency planning for windbreaks, fogging equipment, and evaporation retarder procurement.

2

Reduce Concrete Temperature at Batching

Request chilled or iced mix water from the batching plant on hot days. Pre-wet and shade aggregate stockpiles 24 hours before the pour. Specify a target concrete delivery temperature of ≤ 28°C (ACI 305R recommendation). Each 5°C reduction in concrete temperature reduces evaporation rate by approximately 15–20%. If concrete temperature exceeds 32°C on arrival, consider rejecting the load or requesting a mix temperature correction.

3

Pre-Wet the Sub-Base and Formwork

Thoroughly wet the sub-base, existing concrete base, and formwork immediately before placing concrete. A dry sub-base will absorb bleed water from the fresh concrete, further reducing the surface moisture buffer and increasing plastic shrinkage cracking risk. Do not allow standing water — the surface should be damp but no free water should be visible at the time of placement.

4

Erect Windbreaks Before Placement Begins

Position shade cloth windbreaks or solid hoarding panels upwind of the pour area before the first truck arrives. Windbreaks should extend at least 1.5 m above the slab surface and be positioned so they do not create turbulence over the concrete. A 50% reduction in wind speed reduces the evaporation rate by approximately 30–40%. On large pours, phased windbreak placement ahead of the advancing concrete face is often necessary.

5

Apply Evaporation Retarder Immediately After Strike-Off

Spray an aliphatic alcohol-based evaporation retarder onto the concrete surface as soon as possible after screeding and before any finishing operations begin. Apply in a fine, uniform mist — do not puddle. Reapply after each finishing pass if the surface sheen disappears before the next operation. Evaporation retarders do not prevent evaporation entirely; they slow it by 30–70% and must be used alongside other prevention measures, not as a standalone solution.

6

Operate Fogging / Misting Systems During Finishing

For high-risk conditions (evaporation rate ≥ 1.0 kg/m²/hr), set up fogging or fine mist irrigation systems upwind of the pour to increase ambient humidity immediately above the slab surface. The mist droplets should be fine enough to evaporate before reaching the concrete surface — water droplets landing directly on fresh concrete will mar the surface finish and can cause localised cracking. Maintain misting throughout the entire finishing period.

7

Apply Curing Immediately After Final Trowel

As soon as the concrete can no longer be marked by foot traffic, apply the specified curing system — either a liquid membrane-forming curing compound (ASTM C309 Type 1-D) at the manufacturer's specified application rate, or wet hessian covered by polyethylene sheeting. Do not delay — every minute between final trowel and curing application is additional uncontrolled evaporation time. A 30-minute delay in curing on a high-evaporation day can be enough to initiate plastic shrinkage cracking.

Plastic Shrinkage Cracking Prevention Methods — Comparison

Multiple plastic shrinkage cracking prevention measures are available to the site team. The table below compares the most widely used methods by effectiveness, cost, ease of implementation, and applicability across different project types and scales. Most high-risk pours require a combination of at least two or three measures applied simultaneously.

Prevention Method Evaporation Reduction Cost Level Implementation Speed Best For Limitations
Windbreaks (shade cloth / hoarding) 30–50% Low–Medium Setup before pour Exposed slabs, open sites Not effective against all wind directions
Evaporation Retarder Spray 30–70% Low Immediate — spray after strike-off All slab types, especially low-bleed mixes Must be reapplied; cannot substitute curing
Fogging / Misting Systems 20–40% Medium Set up before pour Large pours, industrial floors, hot weather Requires equipment; droplets must not land on slab
Reduce Concrete Temperature 15–30% Low–Medium Batching plant — plan 24 hrs ahead All projects in hot weather Limited to ~5–8°C reduction practically
Shade Structures (solar exclusion) 20–40% Medium–High Must be in place before pour Interior slabs, covered structures High setup cost; impractical for large areas
Pour Timing (early morning / night) 30–60% Nil Planning stage only All projects — most cost-effective measure May not be feasible due to programme constraints
Immediate Wet Curing (hessian + plastic) Eliminates post-trowel evaporation Low After final trowel — immediately All slab types, final prevention layer Cannot be applied during finishing operations
Polypropylene Fibres in Mix Does not reduce evaporation Low Specified at design stage High-risk environments — reinforces plastic zone Reduces but does not eliminate crack risk

Windbreaks

Evaporation Reduction30–50%
CostLow–Medium
Best ForExposed open sites

Evaporation Retarder Spray

Evaporation Reduction30–70%
CostLow
Best ForAll slab types

Fogging / Misting Systems

Evaporation Reduction20–40%
CostMedium
Best ForLarge industrial pours

Reduce Concrete Temperature

Evaporation Reduction15–30%
CostLow–Medium
Best ForAll hot weather projects

Pour Timing (Early Morning)

Evaporation Reduction30–60%
CostNil
Best ForAll projects

Polypropylene Fibres

Evaporation ReductionNo reduction
CostLow
Best ForHigh-risk environments

Polypropylene Fibres for Plastic Shrinkage Cracking Prevention

The addition of monofilament polypropylene (PP) fibres to the concrete mix is one of the most widely adopted passive measures for plastic shrinkage cracking prevention. At dosage rates of 0.6–1.0 kg/m³, PP fibres create a three-dimensional reinforcing matrix throughout the fresh concrete that bridges micro-cracks as they initiate, redistributing stress and limiting crack widths. Fibres do not prevent evaporation or reduce the driving force of plastic shrinkage — they simply increase the tensile capacity of the paste during the critical plastic window.

Importantly, PP fibres must be monofilament type (single-strand) for effective plastic shrinkage cracking prevention — fibrillated fibres are less effective in this application. Fibres should be uniformly dispersed during mixing, which typically requires an additional 1–2 minutes of mixing time. Surface balling of fibres during trowelling is a common complaint and can be managed by using lower dosage rates (0.6 kg/m³) and ensuring thorough mixing before placement.

✅ PP Fibre Dosage Guide for Plastic Shrinkage Cracking Prevention

  • 0.6 kg/m³ — Low-risk sites, standard slabs, interior floors with controlled environment
  • 0.9 kg/m³ — Moderate-risk sites, exposed exterior slabs, low-bleed mixes (silica fume, fly ash)
  • 1.0–1.2 kg/m³ — High-risk sites, hot weather, windy exposed locations, industrial floor slabs

Evaporation Rate Reference Table — Common Conditions 2026

The table below provides pre-calculated evaporation rates using the ACI 305R formula for a range of typical site conditions encountered in 2026. Use this as a quick field reference to assess plastic shrinkage cracking risk before conducting a full calculation with the tool above. All values assume a concrete placement temperature of 25°C and calm wind (10 km/h) unless stated.

Scenario Air Temp (°C) RH (%) Wind (km/h) Concrete Temp (°C) Evaporation Rate Risk Level
Mild overcast morning 18 70 8 22 0.20 kg/m²/hr ✅ Low
Warm spring day 24 55 12 25 0.45 kg/m²/hr ✅ Low
Warm day, moderate wind 28 45 20 28 0.82 kg/m²/hr ⚠️ Moderate
Hot day, low humidity 35 30 15 30 1.18 kg/m²/hr ❌ High
Hot, dry, windy — classic risk day 38 20 30 32 1.95 kg/m²/hr 🚨 Extreme
Hot but high humidity (tropical) 34 80 10 30 0.38 kg/m²/hr ✅ Low
Interior air-conditioned slab 22 25 5 24 0.62 kg/m²/hr ⚠️ Moderate
Desert climate afternoon 42 15 25 35 2.60 kg/m²/hr 🚨 Extreme

Mild Overcast Morning

Conditions18°C / 70% RH / 8 km/h
Evaporation Rate0.20 kg/m²/hr
Risk✅ Low

Warm Day, Moderate Wind

Conditions28°C / 45% RH / 20 km/h
Evaporation Rate0.82 kg/m²/hr
Risk⚠️ Moderate

Hot Day, Low Humidity

Conditions35°C / 30% RH / 15 km/h
Evaporation Rate1.18 kg/m²/hr
Risk❌ High

Hot, Dry, Windy Day

Conditions38°C / 20% RH / 30 km/h
Evaporation Rate1.95 kg/m²/hr
Risk🚨 Extreme

Interior Air-Conditioned Slab

Conditions22°C / 25% RH / 5 km/h
Evaporation Rate0.62 kg/m²/hr
Risk⚠️ Moderate

Desert Climate Afternoon

Conditions42°C / 15% RH / 25 km/h
Evaporation Rate2.60 kg/m²/hr
Risk🚨 Extreme

What to Do If Plastic Shrinkage Cracks Appear

Despite best efforts, plastic shrinkage cracks can still form on high-risk days. When cracks are observed in fresh concrete, the site team must act immediately — the response window is narrow and the available remedies depend on how recently the cracks formed relative to the initial set of the concrete.

  • If cracks appear within 30–60 minutes of placement (concrete still plastic): Immediately apply a fine mist of evaporation retarder, then re-trowel the area with a float or trowel to close the cracks by working the surface parallel to the crack direction. Do not apply water directly. Cover with wet hessian and plastic sheeting immediately after re-trowelling.
  • If cracks appear during or just after finishing: Re-trowelling at this stage may not fully close the cracks as the concrete is approaching initial set. Apply evaporation retarder and initiate curing immediately. Document crack locations and widths for the project record.
  • If cracks are found after concrete has set: Plastic shrinkage cracks in hardened concrete cannot be reversed. Options include crack injection with low-viscosity epoxy resin (structural cracks), polyurethane or silicone sealant routing and sealing (non-structural), or surface applied crack bridging coatings. For floor slabs receiving adhesive floor coverings, surface grinding followed by crack repair and patching compound application is typically required before installation can proceed.
  • Document and investigate: Record all plastic shrinkage crack occurrences with photographs, time of appearance, weather data, concrete delivery records, and finishing logs. This information is critical for improving plastic shrinkage cracking prevention procedures on future pours and for managing any warranty or defect liability claims.

Frequently Asked Questions — Plastic Shrinkage Cracking Prevention

What is the ACI 305 threshold for plastic shrinkage cracking prevention?
ACI 305R specifies that when the evaporation rate from a fresh concrete surface reaches or exceeds 1.0 kg/m²/hr (0.20 lb/ft²/hr), precautionary measures for plastic shrinkage cracking prevention are required. At rates above 1.5 kg/m²/hr, multiple simultaneous measures — including windbreaks, fogging, and evaporation retarder — are needed. When the calculated rate exceeds 2.0 kg/m²/hr, ACI recommends seriously considering delaying the pour to a more favourable time of day or to the following day.
Does an evaporation retarder replace the need for curing?
No — an evaporation retarder is a temporary surface film that slows moisture loss during the plastic phase and finishing operations only. It is not a curing compound and does not provide adequate protection once the concrete has hardened. A full curing regime — wet hessian and polyethylene sheeting, or an ASTM C309-compliant curing compound — must still be applied immediately after final trowel. Using evaporation retarder without follow-up curing is one of the most common mistakes in plastic shrinkage cracking prevention practice.
Can plastic shrinkage cracks be prevented with polypropylene fibres alone?
Polypropylene fibres significantly reduce plastic shrinkage crack widths and frequency by providing tensile reinforcement in the critical plastic window, but they do not eliminate cracks entirely under high-evaporation conditions. Research shows that at 0.9–1.0 kg/m³ dosage, PP fibres can reduce crack area by 70–80% — but on extreme risk days (evaporation rate >1.5 kg/m²/hr), fibres alone are insufficient. They should be used as one layer in a multi-measure plastic shrinkage cracking prevention strategy, not as a sole remedy.
How quickly do plastic shrinkage cracks form after placement?
Plastic shrinkage cracks typically appear within 1 to 8 hours of concrete placement, with the highest risk window occurring during and immediately after finishing operations. On extreme-risk days (evaporation rate >1.5 kg/m²/hr), cracks can form in as little as 20–30 minutes after the bleed water sheen disappears from the surface. The speed of crack formation underscores why reactive measures (trying to close cracks after they appear) are ineffective — plastic shrinkage cracking prevention must be proactive and in place before placement begins.
Is plastic shrinkage cracking more common in silica fume concrete?
Yes — significantly. Silica fume (microsilica) dramatically reduces or eliminates bleed water in the concrete mix because the ultra-fine silica particles fill the capillary spaces through which bleed water normally rises. Without this surface moisture buffer, even moderate evaporation rates can cause plastic shrinkage cracking very quickly. Any concrete mix containing silica fume, fly ash at high replacement levels, or blast furnace slag should be treated as high plastic shrinkage cracking risk by default, and full prevention measures should be implemented regardless of weather conditions on the day.
Do plastic shrinkage cracks affect structural integrity?
Shallow plastic shrinkage cracks (less than 25–30 mm deep) in non-structural slabs-on-grade generally do not affect structural performance. However, deeper cracks that penetrate through or near reinforcement can accelerate corrosion by providing a direct moisture and chloride pathway to the steel. In structural members — suspended slabs, columns, walls — any through-crack is a structural concern. Additionally, in floor slabs receiving floor coverings, even shallow surface cracks must be repaired before installation to prevent reflective cracking through the covering. Full assessment by a structural engineer is recommended for any plastic shrinkage crack exceeding 0.3 mm width or 100 mm depth.

📖 External Standards & Resources

ACI 305R — Hot Weather Concreting

The primary ACI guide for hot weather concreting, covering evaporation rate calculation, plastic shrinkage cracking prevention measures, mix design modifications, and temperature management for fresh concrete in hot and dry conditions.

View ACI 305R →

ACI 308R — Guide to External Curing

Comprehensive guide to curing methods for concrete, including evaporation retarders, wet curing, and membrane-forming curing compounds. Essential companion document for any plastic shrinkage cracking prevention programme.

View ACI 308R →

ASTM C309 — Curing Compound Standard

Standard specification for liquid membrane-forming compounds used for curing concrete. Defines Type 1, 1-D, 2, and 2-W classifications used in plastic shrinkage cracking prevention and post-placement curing programmes.

View ASTM C309 →