Everything engineers, specifiers, and builders need to know about fly ash in concrete in 2026
A complete guide to fly ash in concrete — covering benefits, limitations, Class C vs Class F types, dosage limits, mix design requirements, sustainability advantages, and practical specification guidance for structural and residential concrete in 2026.
A practical reference for engineers, builders, and specifiers evaluating fly ash as a supplementary cementitious material (SCM) in 2026
Fly ash is a fine, glassy powder recovered from the flue gases of coal-burning power stations. When used as a supplementary cementitious material (SCM) in concrete, it partially replaces Portland cement in the mix. Fly ash reacts with the calcium hydroxide released during cement hydration — a process called pozzolanic reaction — to form additional calcium silicate hydrate (C-S-H), the compound that gives concrete its strength. It is one of the most widely used SCMs in concrete production globally in 2026.
Fly ash is used in concrete primarily to reduce costs, improve workability, enhance long-term durability, and lower the carbon footprint of the mix. Because fly ash replaces a portion of Portland cement — which accounts for approximately 90% of concrete's embodied carbon — even a 20% replacement rate can cut CO₂ emissions by 15–18% per cubic metre. In 2026, fly ash use is strongly encouraged under green building rating systems including LEED, Green Star, and BREEAM.
This guide is essential for structural engineers specifying concrete mixes for buildings and infrastructure, project managers evaluating sustainable material options, batch plant operators optimising mix designs, and builders assessing the practical implications of fly ash use for their projects. Understanding the full benefits and limits of fly ash in concrete ensures correct specification decisions, avoids common placement and curing errors, and achieves the intended structural and durability performance in 2026.
A side-by-side overview of the key advantages and limitations of using fly ash in concrete mixes
Fly ash in concrete is a supplementary cementitious material (SCM) produced as a fine particulate by-product when pulverised coal is burned in electric power station furnaces. The fine ash particles are carried upward in the flue gas and collected by electrostatic precipitators or bag filters before the gas is released into the atmosphere. The resulting material — a light grey or tan powder — consists primarily of silicon dioxide (SiO₂), aluminium oxide (Al₂O₃), and iron oxide (Fe₂O₃), with smaller amounts of calcium oxide (CaO) depending on the coal source.
When blended into a concrete mix, fly ash reacts with the calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)₂) produced as a by-product of Portland cement hydration. This secondary reaction — called the pozzolanic reaction — produces additional calcium silicate hydrate (C-S-H), the primary binding compound in hardened concrete. The pozzolanic reaction is slower than primary cement hydration, which explains fly ash concrete's lower early strength but superior long-term strength development. For related guidance on assessing the condition of existing concrete incorporating SCMs, see our Assessing Existing Concrete Structures Guide.
The pozzolanic reaction begins after initial cement hydration provides Ca(OH)₂. It continues for weeks to months, gradually filling capillary pores and increasing both strength and resistance to chemical attack. This is why fly ash concrete should always be assessed at 56 or 90 days, not just 28 days.
Not all fly ash is the same. The two primary classifications under ASTM C618 — Class C and Class F — differ significantly in chemical composition, cementitious reactivity, and appropriate application. Australian Standard AS 3582.1 classifies fly ash similarly. Selecting the correct class is one of the most important decisions in fly ash concrete specification, as the wrong class in the wrong application can compromise both durability and structural performance.
| Property | Class F Fly Ash | Class C Fly Ash |
|---|---|---|
| Source Coal | Bituminous or anthracite coal | Sub-bituminous or lignite coal |
| CaO Content | < 10% (low calcium) | > 20% (high calcium) |
| SiO₂ + Al₂O₃ + Fe₂O₃ | ≥ 70% (ASTM C618) | ≥ 50% (ASTM C618) |
| Cementitious Activity | Pozzolanic only (requires Ca(OH)₂ activator) | Both pozzolanic AND cementitious (self-cementing) |
| Early Strength | Lower early strength gain | Better early strength than Class F |
| ASR Mitigation | Excellent — preferred for ASR-susceptible aggregates | Limited — less effective for ASR control |
| Sulphate Resistance | Excellent | Less effective — Class F preferred in sulphate soils |
| Typical Replacement Rate | 15–35% of cement | 15–40% of cement |
| Common Use | Most structural concrete; marine; sulphate exposure | Mass concrete; precast; cold weather applications |
| Australian Standard | AS 3582.1 — typically Grade 1 or Grade 2 | Less common in Australia; more prevalent in North America |
The dosage (replacement rate) of fly ash is the single most critical parameter in fly ash concrete specification. Too little delivers few benefits; too much compromises early strength, freeze-thaw resistance, carbonation resistance, or chemical resistance, depending on the application. Australian Standard AS 3600, ACI 318 (USA), and EN 206 (Europe) all provide guidance on maximum fly ash content by exposure class. The table below summarises recommended and maximum replacement rates for the most common applications in 2026.
| Application | Recommended Replacement (%) | Maximum Replacement (%) | Key Consideration |
|---|---|---|---|
| General structural concrete (slabs, columns, beams) | 20–30% | 40% (AS 3600) | Specify 56-day strength; extended curing essential |
| Mass concrete (footings, rafts, retaining walls) | 30–50% | 60% (with engineer approval) | Excellent thermal crack prevention; primary use case |
| Marine / chloride-exposed concrete | 25–35% | 35% | Use Class F only; reduces chloride diffusion significantly |
| Sulphate-exposed concrete | 25–35% Class F | 35% Class F | Class F only; Class C increases sulphate vulnerability |
| Pavements and driveways | 15–25% | 30% | Consider delayed strength for early traffic loading |
| Precast concrete | 15–25% | 30% | Steam curing accelerates pozzolanic reaction; compatible with fly ash |
| Cold weather concreting (≤ 5°C) | 10–20% | 20% | Pozzolanic reaction is temperature-dependent; heat curing may be needed |
| High-strength concrete (> 65 MPa) | 10–20% | 25% | Combined with silica fume for optimum strength–durability balance |
| Concrete exposed to freeze-thaw cycles | 15–20% | 25% | Must use air entrainment; monitor air void spacing factor carefully |
Understanding each benefit in technical depth allows engineers and specifiers to make the strongest case for fly ash use and to select the right replacement rate, fly ash class, and curing protocol for the application. The benefits are most pronounced in mass concrete, marine structures, sulphate-exposed elements, and any application where long service life is the primary design objective.
Portland cement generates approximately 330–420 kJ/kg during hydration. Fly ash generates only 50–120 kJ/kg during its slower pozzolanic reaction. In mass concrete elements — footings, raft slabs, large columns — the temperature differential between the core and surface can exceed 35°C in straight cement mixes, causing thermal cracking. Replacing 30–50% of cement with fly ash reduces peak core temperatures by 10–20°C, dramatically reducing thermal cracking risk. This is the single most important benefit of fly ash in mass concrete applications in 2026.
The pozzolanic reaction consumes the calcium hydroxide that would otherwise remain as a soluble, leachable compound in hardened concrete. The resulting additional C-S-H gel fills capillary pores, producing a denser, less permeable microstructure. Fly ash concrete demonstrates chloride diffusion coefficients 40–60% lower than plain cement concrete at equivalent w/c ratios, extending service life in marine and de-icing salt environments from a typical 50 years to 80–100+ years when correctly specified and cured.
Fly ash typically costs $80–$130/tonne delivered to batch plant, compared to $160–$240/tonne for Portland cement in Australia in 2026. At a 25% replacement rate in a standard 350 kg/m³ cement mix, the fly ash content is approximately 87 kg/m³ replacing 87 kg of cement — a saving of approximately $7–$12/m³. On large infrastructure projects with thousands of cubic metres of concrete, these savings are substantial. The workability improvement also reduces water demand and often allows a reduction in total binder content without sacrificing strength.
Portland cement production generates approximately 0.83 kg CO₂ per kg of cement, making it responsible for 7–8% of global CO₂ emissions in 2026. Fly ash production generates near-zero direct CO₂ (it is a by-product). Replacing 25% of cement with fly ash reduces the embodied carbon of a standard concrete mix from approximately 290 kg CO₂/m³ to approximately 230 kg CO₂/m³ — a 20% reduction. For projects targeting Green Star, LEED, or BREEAM credits, fly ash use is one of the most impactful and cost-effective embodied carbon reduction strategies available.
Alkali-silica reaction (ASR) is a destructive chemical reaction between the alkali hydroxides in cement paste and certain reactive silica minerals in aggregate, producing an expansive gel that causes map cracking. Class F fly ash is highly effective at suppressing ASR because it consumes alkalis in the pozzolanic reaction, reducing the alkali concentration below the threshold needed to sustain ASR expansion. Replacement rates of 25–35% Class F fly ash are widely accepted by standards as a preventative measure when reactive aggregates are identified in aggregate testing.
Fly ash particles are predominantly spherical, produced by rapid cooling of droplets in the furnace gas stream. Unlike the angular, irregular particles of Portland cement, these spheres act as micro-ball-bearings within the concrete mix, reducing internal friction and improving flow. This allows water content to be reduced by 2–10% while maintaining equivalent workability — improving both the fresh concrete properties and the hardened concrete strength and durability. The improved flow is especially valuable for pumped concrete, heavily reinforced sections, and slip-formed elements where placement consistency is critical.
The limitations of fly ash in concrete are as important to understand as the benefits. Incorrect specification — wrong class, excessive replacement rate, inadequate curing, or wrong application — can result in concrete that underperforms structurally, fails durability requirements, or causes project delays. The following practical guidance addresses the most critical risks.
The pozzolanic reaction of fly ash is highly temperature-dependent. Below 10°C, the reaction slows dramatically; below 5°C, it effectively stops. This means fly ash concrete placed in cold conditions without heating measures will not achieve design strength within the expected timeframe and may remain vulnerable to freeze-thaw damage if loaded or exposed to frost before adequate hydration has occurred. When ambient or concrete temperatures are forecast below 10°C, fly ash replacement rates should be limited to a maximum of 20% and supplementary heating (heated mix water, insulated formwork, enclosed curing) must be provided. This is a non-negotiable limit for cold climate applications in 2026.
High fly ash replacement rates reduce the total alkalinity (pH) of the concrete pore solution because less calcium hydroxide is produced and more is consumed by the pozzolanic reaction. Lower alkalinity means the concrete's passive layer protecting reinforcement from corrosion is more susceptible to carbonation — the gradual neutralisation of concrete alkalinity by atmospheric CO₂. In aggressive carbonation environments (urban air, high CO₂ tunnels, industrial atmospheres), fly ash replacement rates should be limited to 25–30% and concrete cover must meet the minimum requirements of AS 3600 or ACI 318 for the relevant exposure class. This is particularly important in thin-section elements and lightly reinforced slabs where carbonation depth may reach the bar within the design service life if cover is inadequate.
One of the most common and costly mistakes when using fly ash in concrete is specifying and accepting only 28-day compressive strength as the conformance criterion. Fly ash concrete achieves a significantly lower proportion of its final strength at 28 days compared to plain cement concrete — a 32 MPa fly ash mix at 25% replacement may achieve only 25–28 MPa at 28 days but comfortably exceed 35–40 MPa at 56–90 days. Project specifications should explicitly state that the design characteristic strength shall be assessed at 56 days (or 90 days for high fly ash content mixes) to avoid incorrectly rejecting compliant concrete or requiring unnecessary remediation. This is consistent with AS 3600-2018 and ACI 301-16 guidance for SCM concrete.
Fly ash is one of several supplementary cementitious materials available to concrete specifiers. Choosing between fly ash, ground granulated blast-furnace slag (GGBS), silica fume, and natural pozzolans requires understanding the distinct performance profile of each. For related guidance on air-entrained mixes often used alongside SCMs in cold climate concrete, see our Air-Entrained Concrete Uses & Benefits Guide.
| SCM Type | Typical Replacement | Early Strength | Long-Term Durability | Heat Reduction | Carbon Saving | Cost vs Cement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fly Ash (Class F) | 15–35% | Reduced | Excellent | High | ~20% at 25% | 30–60% lower |
| Fly Ash (Class C) | 15–40% | Moderate | Good | High | ~20% at 25% | 30–60% lower |
| GGBS (Slag) | 30–70% | Reduced | Excellent | Very High | ~40% at 50% | 20–40% lower |
| Silica Fume | 5–12% | Excellent | Outstanding | Minimal | ~8% at 10% | Higher than cement |
| Calcined Clay (LC³) | 15–40% | Moderate | Very Good | Moderate | ~30% at 30% | 10–30% lower |
| Natural Pozzolan | 10–25% | Reduced | Good | Moderate | ~15% at 20% | Variable |
How air entrainment improves freeze-thaw durability in concrete — often used alongside fly ash in cold climate mixes
🔍Methods and criteria for evaluating existing concrete elements, including SCM concrete inspection techniques
🔊Sound insulation, impact noise ratings, and acoustic design for concrete floor systems in 2026
🧱Selecting and placing backfill materials behind concrete retaining walls to ensure long-term stability
Fly ash for use in concrete is governed by AS 3582.1 in Australia and ASTM C618 in the USA. These standards define chemical composition requirements, fineness, loss on ignition (LOI), strength activity index, and classification into Grade 1 or Grade 2 (AS 3582) or Class C and Class F (ASTM C618). Always specify compliance with the relevant standard and require test certificates from the fly ash supplier with each delivery to confirm quality consistency in 2026.
Concrete Assessment Guide →When fly ash is used in concrete exposed to freeze-thaw cycles, air entrainment is mandatory to protect the paste matrix from ice pressure. However, fly ash's spherical particles and reduced water demand can affect air entrainment dosage response — typically requiring a higher air-entraining admixture dosage than plain cement mixes. Our Air-Entrained Concrete Guide provides detailed guidance on specifying and testing air entrainment in fly ash mixes for cold climate durability in 2026.
Air Entrainment Guide →Concrete retaining walls are a prime application for fly ash concrete — the mass of wall footings benefits from reduced heat of hydration, while the sulphate and chloride resistance of Class F fly ash mixes is valuable where walls are in contact with aggressive soils or groundwater. Our Backfill Materials for Retaining Walls Guide complements this fly ash guide by covering sub-base preparation, drainage, and backfill selection that work alongside durable fly ash concrete construction in 2026.
Retaining Wall Guide →