Comprehensive reference for all key concrete durability testing methods to BS EN 12390 and UK standards
Master concrete durability testing methods in 2026 — carbonation depth, chloride penetration, water permeability, abrasion resistance, freeze-thaw cycling, alkali-silica reaction, and chemical resistance. Covers BS EN 12390, BS 8500, and site-to-laboratory best practice for UK construction professionals.
Professional technical reference covering the principal concrete durability testing methods used across UK construction, structural assessment, and infrastructure projects
Compressive strength alone does not define a concrete structure's long-term performance. Durability testing methods assess a structure's resistance to carbonation, chloride ingress, freeze-thaw cycling, chemical attack, and abrasion — the mechanisms that cause real-world deterioration. Under BS 8500-1:2023 and BS EN 206, durability must be considered at the specification stage using exposure class designations (XC, XD, XS, XF, XA) that directly drive the required test performance.
Concrete durability testing in the UK is governed by the BS EN 12390 series, which covers testing of hardened concrete including permeability, carbonation, and related properties. The BS EN 13295 series covers protection and repair products. For in-situ assessment of existing structures, BRE Digest 444 and CIRIA C660 provide complementary guidance used by structural engineers and asset owners across the UK in 2026.
The correct concrete durability testing method depends on the exposure environment of the structure. Carbonation tests (XC class) are most relevant to general building structures. Chloride tests (XD and XS classes) are critical for car parks, coastal structures, and marine infrastructure. Freeze-thaw tests (XF class) are mandatory for exposed pavements and external slabs. Chemical resistance tests (XA class) apply to foundations in aggressive ground conditions — particularly relevant under UK Building Regulations Part A in 2026.
Each test method targets a specific deterioration mechanism — select tests based on structure type and BS EN 206 exposure class designation.
Concrete durability testing methods are the set of standardised laboratory and in-situ procedures used to evaluate how well a concrete element will resist deterioration over its design life. A typical UK structure is designed for a service life of 50 years (standard) or 100 years (infrastructure), and durability testing provides the evidence that the as-built concrete will achieve this target without premature intervention.
Durability failures are amongst the most expensive in the construction industry. Assessing existing concrete structures for deterioration caused by chloride-induced corrosion, carbonation-induced corrosion, or frost damage routinely costs many times the original construction cost. Systematic durability testing at the construction stage — and at regular intervals throughout the service life — is the most cost-effective strategy for managing structural asset performance in 2026.
The following test method cards cover each of the principal concrete durability testing methods used in UK practice in 2026, including the governing standard, test procedure summary, acceptance criteria, and typical applications.
Carbonation occurs when atmospheric CO₂ reacts with calcium hydroxide in the cement paste, reducing the concrete's pH from approximately 13 to below 9. Once the carbonation front reaches the reinforcement, the passive protective layer on the steel breaks down and corrosion begins. Carbonation depth testing measures how far this process has progressed — or how fast it will progress — through the concrete cover.
Procedure: A freshly fractured or split concrete core face is sprayed with a 1% phenolphthalein indicator solution. Uncarbonated concrete (pH > 9) turns vivid purple-pink; carbonated concrete (pH < 9) remains colourless. The depth of the colourless zone is measured at multiple points across the section and averaged.
Accelerated test (BS EN 12390-10): Specimens are conditioned and then exposed to 3–4% CO₂ concentration at controlled temperature and humidity. This accelerates the carbonation process by a factor of approximately 50–100× compared to natural exposure, allowing durability predictions within weeks rather than years.
Chloride penetration is the leading cause of reinforcement corrosion in coastal structures, marine infrastructure, highway bridges, and car park decks exposed to de-icing salts. Chloride durability testing methods quantify either the diffusion coefficient (long-term migration rate) or the total chloride charge passed (RCPT) as an indicator of concrete permeability to chloride ions.
Rapid Chloride Migration Test (NT Build 492 / BS EN 12390-11): A 50mm slice cut from a 100mm diameter core is placed between two solutions — 0.3M NaOH (anolyte) and 10% NaCl (catholyte). A 30V DC potential is applied for 24 hours, forcing chloride ions through the specimen. After splitting, silver nitrate spray reveals the colourless/white silver chloride precipitation front, and the chloride migration coefficient (Drcm) is calculated.
Rapid Chloride Permeability Test (AASHTO T277 / ASTM C1202): Measures the total electrical charge (coulombs) passed through a 51mm concrete disc in 6 hours at 60V DC. Results rated from <100 C (very low permeability) to >4,000 C (high permeability).
Water permeability is a fundamental indicator of concrete quality and durability. A low-permeability concrete resists the ingress of water, dissolved chlorides, sulfates, and carbon dioxide — all the agents that drive deterioration. BS EN 12390-8 is the standard water penetration under pressure test used in the UK and across Europe for assessing concrete impermeability.
Procedure: A 150mm cube (or cylinder) is subjected to a water pressure of 500 kPa (5 bar) applied to one face for 72 hours. After the test, the specimen is split and the depth of water penetration is measured. The maximum and mean penetration depths are recorded. For waterproof concrete (often specified as WR or WP grade), a maximum penetration of 50mm and a mean of 20mm are typical acceptance criteria.
Freeze-thaw attack occurs when water-saturated concrete is subjected to repeated freezing and thawing cycles. Water expands by approximately 9% on freezing, generating internal hydraulic pressure that causes surface scaling, microcracking, and progressive loss of strength. Air-entrained concrete — specified to BS 8500 for XF3 and XF4 exposure classes — provides sacrificial void space that relieves this pressure.
CDF Test (Capillary Suction of De-icing agent and Freeze-thaw): The most widely used freeze-thaw surface scaling test in European practice. Specimens are subjected to 28 freeze-thaw cycles in a 3% NaCl solution (simulating de-icing salt). After each cycle set, the mass of scaled material is collected and weighed. The cumulative scaling mass per unit area (kg/m²) is the key performance indicator.
BS EN 12390-9 covers the slab test methodology. For XF1/XF2 exposure, an air content of 3.5–5.5% is typically targeted; for XF3/XF4 (severe with de-icing salts), 4.5–7% entrained air is specified to BS 8500.
Abrasion resistance is the critical durability property for industrial concrete floors, warehouse slabs, road pavements, and any surface subject to wheeled traffic, pedestrian wear, or mechanical abrasion. Inadequate abrasion resistance leads to surface dusting, aggregate release, and eventual structural thinning of the slab — a common and costly defect in poorly specified industrial floors.
BS EN 13892-4 (BCA Rolling Wheel Test): A loaded steel wheel rolls across the concrete surface at a fixed load for a set number of passes. The volume of material abraded from the surface is measured in mm³ and classified against categories AR0.5 to AR6 (where AR0.5 is the most abrasion-resistant, required for the most demanding industrial environments).
BS EN 13892-3 (Böhme Test): A rotating abrasion disc with standard abrasive grit wears the concrete surface under defined pressure. The volume loss (cm³/50cm²) classifies the concrete into hardness categories. This test is widely used for floor topping compounds and surface treatments as well as base concrete.
Chemical attack on concrete encompasses sulfate attack, acid attack, and leaching. Sulfate attack is the most common form in the UK, occurring when sulfate ions in ground water or soil react with tricalcium aluminate (C₃A) in the cement paste to form expansive products (ettringite and gypsum), causing cracking and progressive disintegration. The BRE Special Digest 1 (SD1) is the principal UK guide for classifying ground aggressivity and selecting appropriate concrete specifications for foundations.
Sulfate resistance testing (ASTM C1012): Mortar bars are immersed in a 5% sodium sulfate solution for up to 18 months. Expansion of the bars is measured at regular intervals. Sulfate-resistant cements (SRPC or CEM I with low C₃A content, or blended cements with GGBS or PFA) are specified for XA class exposures to BS 8500.
pH measurement and acid attack: For highly acidic environments (XA3), specialist testing including pH monitoring of leachate and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) of the deterioration front may be required. See the backfill materials guide for foundation environment considerations.
Alkali-silica reaction (ASR) is an expansive chemical reaction between reactive silica in certain aggregates and the alkali hydroxides in cement paste pore solution. The reaction produces an alkali-silica gel that absorbs water, swells, and causes characteristic map cracking (sometimes called "concrete cancer"). ASR is a slow process, typically manifesting over decades, making pre-construction testing and aggregate assessment essential for long-life structures.
ASTM C1260 (Accelerated Mortar Bar Test): Mortar bars are immersed in a 1N NaOH solution at 80°C for 16 days. Expansion greater than 0.20% indicates potentially deleterious reactivity. Expansion of 0.10–0.20% is considered moderately reactive — requiring further testing or specification of low-alkali cement.
UK Guidance (BRE Digest 330): The UK approach to ASR avoidance is primarily through aggregate combination testing and specifying low-alkali cements (Na₂O equivalent < 0.6%) or using GGBS/PFA to suppress the alkali-silica reaction. The Concrete Society Technical Report 69 provides the current UK framework for ASR assessment and prevention in 2026.
Use this table to identify the correct concrete durability testing method for your project based on exposure class, governing standard, specimen requirements, and typical test duration.
| Test Method | Governing Standard | Exposure Class | Specimen | Test Duration | Key Output |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carbonation Depth | BS EN 12390-10 | XC1–XC4 | 100mm cube / core | 56–91 days (acc.) | Carbonation depth (mm) |
| Chloride Migration (RCM) | BS EN 12390-11 / NT Build 492 | XD1–3 / XS1–3 | 50mm disc, 100mm dia. | 24 hours | Drcm (×10⁻¹² m²/s) |
| Rapid Chloride Permeability (RCPT) | AASHTO T277 / ASTM C1202 | XD / XS | 51mm disc, 100mm dia. | 6 hours | Coulombs passed |
| Water Penetration | BS EN 12390-8 | All exposure classes | 150mm cube | 72 hours | Penetration depth (mm) |
| Freeze-Thaw (CDF) | BS EN 12390-9 | XF1–XF4 | 150×150×70mm slab | 28 cycles (~4 weeks) | Scaling mass (kg/m²) |
| Abrasion (Böhme) | BS EN 13892-3 | XM / floors | 71mm × 71mm surface | ~4 hours | Volume loss (cm³/50cm²) |
| Sulfate Resistance | ASTM C1012 / BRE SD1 | XA1–XA3 | Mortar bars 25×25×285mm | Up to 18 months | Expansion (%) |
| Alkali-Silica Reaction | ASTM C1260 / BRE Digest 330 | All (aggregate risk) | Mortar bars 25×25×285mm | 16 days (acc.) | Expansion (%) |
The reliability of any concrete durability test result depends critically on correct specimen preparation. Poor sampling, incorrect curing, or damaged specimens are the most common sources of misleading test data in UK practice. The following requirements apply to all concrete durability testing programmes in 2026.
Cast specimens (cubes, cylinders, prisms) are taken during the pour and cured to BS EN 12390-2. Drilled cores from in-service structures are taken to BS EN 12504-1. Cores must be free of cracks, inclusions, and near-surface features. The core-to-cube strength ratio is typically 0.85–0.92 for sound concrete.
Most durability tests require specimens to be pre-conditioned to a defined moisture state before testing. The standard conditioning regime for permeability and chloride tests is vacuum saturation or oven drying at 50°C followed by cooling in a desiccator. Incorrect pre-conditioning is a leading source of test variability between laboratories.
Diamond saw cutting is required for test discs and slabs. Cut surfaces must be flat and parallel to within 0.5mm. The outermost 5mm of any cast or formed surface must be removed before testing as the surface layer is not representative of the bulk concrete durability due to the wall effect and curing differences.
Further technical reading on concrete construction, assessment, and material performance
Sound insulation, impact noise, and floor design for Building Regulations Part E compliance
💨When and why to specify air entrainment — freeze-thaw resistance, workability, and durability
🔍Inspection methods, defect identification, and structural assessment techniques for existing concrete
🏗️Backfill materials, compaction methods, and best practice for foundation protection
The core UK and European standard series for testing hardened concrete, covering water penetration (Part 8), carbonation (Part 10), chloride migration (Part 11), and freeze-thaw scaling (Part 9). Mandatory reference for all compliance durability testing in 2026.
BSI Standards →TR69 (alkali-silica reaction), TR34 (industrial floors and abrasion), TR66 (early-age thermal crack control). The Concrete Society is the primary UK technical authority for concrete durability guidance in professional practice.
Concrete Society →The essential UK reference for classifying ground aggressivity and specifying concrete for chemically aggressive ground conditions (XA class). Essential for any UK foundation project where sulfate or acid ground conditions may exist.
BRE Publications →