Modulus of Elasticity of Concrete – Formula, Values and Uses

Modulus of Elasticity of Concrete – Formula, Values and Importance

When a load is applied to a concrete structure, the concrete doesn’t just develop stresses — it also deforms. The relationship between that stress and the resulting deformation is described by the Modulus of Elasticity (Ec). It’s a fundamental property that every structural engineer uses when designing beams, columns, and slabs for deflection and stiffness. This article explains everything about Ec in a way that makes sense for RTMNU students.

1. What is Modulus of Elasticity?

The Modulus of Elasticity (E), also called Young’s Modulus, is defined as the ratio of stress to strain within the elastic range of a material:

E = Stress (σ) ÷ Strain (ε)   [Unit: N/mm² or MPa]

In steel, this is simple — the stress-strain curve is perfectly linear up to the yield point, giving a constant, well-defined E = 200,000 MPa (200 GPa). Concrete is far more complicated. It doesn’t have a truly elastic (linear) zone. Even at low stresses, concrete deforms non-linearly because micro-cracks open progressively. This means the “E” of concrete is always an approximation — a tangent, a secant, or a chord to the actual curved stress-strain diagram.

Despite this complexity, we use Ec constantly in structural design for calculating deflections, designing prestressed members, analysing frame structures, and estimating long-term behaviour under sustained loading.

2. Types of Modulus for Concrete

Because the stress-strain curve of concrete is non-linear, we define Ec differently depending on the application:

  • Tangent Modulus (Et): The slope of the tangent to the stress-strain curve at a specific point. Highest at origin (initial tangent modulus), decreases as stress increases. Represents the instantaneous stiffness at that stress level. Not commonly used in design.
  • Secant Modulus (Es): The slope of the line drawn from the origin to a specific point on the stress-strain curve (typically at working stress level, about 40% of peak stress). This is the most practically useful and is what IS 456:2000 formula approximates.
  • Chord Modulus (Ech): The slope of the line connecting two specific points on the stress-strain curve (not starting from origin). Used in some experimental studies and non-linear analysis.

Magnitude ranking: Tangent (at origin) > Secant > Chord (at high stress)

For practical structural design, the secant modulus at about 1/3 of ultimate stress is used. This is what IS 456:2000 and IS 1343 formulas provide.

3. IS 456:2000 Formula for Ec

IS 456:2000 Clause 6.2.3.1 gives the following empirical formula for the short-term static modulus of elasticity:

Ec = 5000 √fck   MPa
fck = Characteristic compressive strength (MPa)  |  Ec in MPa  |  IS 456:2000 Clause 6.2.3.1

For prestressed concrete (IS 1343:2012), a slightly modified formula is used:

Ec = 5700 √fck   MPa
IS 1343:2012 Clause 5.2.3 — slightly higher constant reflecting higher-quality concrete typically used in PSC

The √fck relationship reflects the physical fact that Ec is related to the density and stiffness of the hardened paste and aggregate skeleton, which improves with strength but not proportionally — hence the square root rather than a linear relationship.

4. Solved Numerical

Problem: Find the modulus of elasticity for M25 and M30 concrete using IS 456:2000 formula. Also find the strain at working stress of 8.5 MPa for M25.

For M25: Ec = 5000 × √25 = 5000 × 5 = 25,000 MPa = 25 GPa

For M30: Ec = 5000 × √30 = 5000 × 5.477 = 27,386 MPa ≈ 27.4 GPa

Strain at 8.5 MPa working stress (M25):
ε = σ ÷ Ec = 8.5 ÷ 25,000 = 0.00034 = 3.4 × 10³ microstrain

Note: For steel at same stress: ε = 8.5 ÷ 200,000 = 4.25 × 10² microstrain — steel deforms 8× less for the same stress, confirming concrete is much less stiff.

5. Ec Values for Common Concrete Grades

Grade fck (MPa) √fck Ec = 5000√fck (MPa) Ec (GPa)
M15 15 3.873 19,365 19.4
M20 20 4.472 22,360 22.4
M25 25 5.000 25,000 25.0
M30 30 5.477 27,386 27.4
M35 35 5.916 29,580 29.6
M40 40 6.325 31,623 31.6
M50 50 7.071 35,355 35.4

Note: Steel Es = 200,000 MPa (200 GPa) — about 8 times stiffer than M25 concrete.

6. Factors Affecting Modulus of Elasticity

  • Compressive strength (fck): Ec increases with strength. Higher grade concrete → denser C-S-H gel → stiffer matrix.
  • Aggregate type and content: Aggregate is generally stiffer than the cement paste. Stiffer aggregates (granite, basalt) produce concrete with higher Ec. Lightweight aggregates produce lower Ec.
  • Age: Ec increases with age as hydration continues and the paste becomes denser.
  • W/C ratio: Lower W/C → denser paste → higher Ec.
  • Rate of loading: Rapid loading gives higher apparent Ec (dynamic modulus) because creep doesn’t have time to contribute. IS 456 formula gives the static modulus.
  • Type of stress: Ec in compression is commonly used. Ec in tension is approximately the same at low stress levels but drops rapidly once micro-cracking begins.

7. Poisson’s Ratio and Shear Modulus

When concrete is compressed axially, it expands laterally. The ratio of lateral strain to axial strain is Poisson’s Ratio (ν):

  • For concrete: ν = 0.15 to 0.20 (typically taken as 0.15 for design per IS 456)
  • For steel: ν = 0.27–0.30

The Shear Modulus (G) relates shear stress to shear strain:

G = Ec ÷ [2(1 + ν)]  →  For ν = 0.15: G ≈ Ec ÷ 2.3

For M25 concrete: G ≈ 25,000 ÷ 2.3 ≈ 10,870 MPa ≈ 10.9 GPa

8. Uses of Ec in Structural Design

  • Deflection calculations: IS 456:2000 requires deflection checks for beams and slabs. The short-term deflection is computed using Ec: δ = kWL³/(EcI). This is one of the most common uses in design practice.
  • Frame analysis: In multi-storey RCC frames, Ec × I (flexural rigidity) determines the stiffness of each member, which governs how loads are distributed through the structure.
  • Prestressed concrete design: Prestress losses due to elastic shortening are calculated using Ec (IS 1343:2012).
  • Crack width calculation: IS 456 Annex F uses Ec in computing the strain at the tension fibre for crack width estimation.
  • Shrinkage and creep analysis: The ratio Es/Ec (modular ratio m) appears in transformed section calculations and long-term behaviour predictions.
  • Modular Ratio (m): m = Es/Ec = 280/(3σcbc) per IS 456 working stress method. For M25: m ≈ 280/(3×8.5) ≈ 10.98 ≈ 11.

9. Diagram – Ec Formula, Values and Comparison

Modulus of Elasticity of Concrete — IS 456:2000

IS 456:2000 Formula
Ec = 5000 √fck
Ec in MPa  |  fck in MPa

IS 1343 (PSC) Formula
Ec = 5700 √fck
For prestressed concrete members

Ec Values for Common Grades  (Ec = 5000√fck)
M20
22,360
MPa

M25
25,000
MPa

M30
27,386
MPa

M35
29,580
MPa

M40
31,623
MPa

Ec Comparison: Concrete vs Steel vs Aluminium
Steel

200,000 MPa (200 GPa)

Aluminium

70,000 MPa

Concrete (M25)

25,000 MPa (~1/8 of steel)

Poisson’s Ratio ν = 0.15–0.20  |  Shear Modulus G ≈ Ec/2.3  |  Tangent modulus > Secant modulus > Chord modulus

10. Exam Tips (RTMNU)

  • IS 456 Clause 6.2.3.1: Ec = 5000√fck MPa — memorise with IS code reference.
  • ✅ For M25: Ec = 5000 × 5 = 25,000 MPa exactly — a clean calculation that impresses.
  • ✅ Three types: Tangent > Secant > Chord modulus. IS 456 gives the secant (static) modulus.
  • ✅ Poisson’s ratio for concrete: 0.15–0.20 (use 0.15 for IS design).
  • ✅ Modular ratio m = Es/Ec = 280/(3σcbc) — this appears in working stress method.
  • ✅ Steel E = 200 GPa, concrete M25 E = 25 GPa — steel is 8× stiffer. State this comparison.

11. Key Takeaways

  • Ec = stress/strain. IS 456:2000 formula: Ec = 5000√fck MPa (Clause 6.2.3.1).
  • For M25: Ec = 25,000 MPa. For M30: Ec = 27,386 MPa.
  • Concrete is about 8 times less stiff than steel (25 GPa vs 200 GPa).
  • Three types of modulus: Tangent (highest) > Secant > Chord. IS 456 gives the static secant modulus.
  • Poisson’s ratio for concrete: 0.15–0.20. Shear modulus G ≈ Ec/2.3.
  • Ec is used for deflection, frame analysis, prestress losses, crack widths, and modular ratio.

12. Frequently Asked Questions

Q1. What is the IS 456:2000 formula for modulus of elasticity of concrete?

IS 456:2000 Clause 6.2.3.1 gives: Ec = 5000√fck MPa, where fck is the characteristic compressive strength in MPa. For M25: Ec = 5000 × 5 = 25,000 MPa = 25 GPa.

Q2. Why is Ec proportional to √fck and not fck directly?

Stiffness (Ec) depends on the density and packing of the C-S-H gel and aggregate skeleton. This relationship improves with strength but not linearly — there are diminishing returns in stiffness as strength increases, which a square root relationship captures well. It also reflects the empirical observation from thousands of test data points.

Q3. What is the difference between tangent and secant modulus?

Tangent modulus is the slope of the tangent line at a specific point on the stress-strain curve (highest at the origin). Secant modulus is the slope of the line from the origin to a specific point (typically working stress level ~40% of peak). For design purposes, IS 456 uses the static secant modulus.

Q4. What is the modular ratio of concrete and why is it used?

Modular ratio m = Es/Ec is the ratio of the elastic modulus of steel to that of concrete. It is used in working stress method to convert the steel reinforcement area into an equivalent concrete area for section analysis. Per IS 456: m = 280/(3σcbc), where σcbc is the permissible compressive stress in bending for the given concrete grade.

Q5. How does aggregate type affect Ec?

Aggregate is typically stiffer than the cement paste matrix. Concrete made with stiff, dense aggregates (granite, quartzite, basalt) has higher Ec than the IS 456 formula predicts, while concrete with soft, porous aggregates (limestone, sandstone) or lightweight aggregates has lower Ec. The IS 456 formula is calibrated for typical Indian crushed rock aggregates.

🔗 Related: Stress-Strain Curve of Concrete – Complete Guide

🔗 Related: Compressive Strength of Concrete – Cube Test and Grades

📚 Reference: IS 456:2000 Clause 6.2.3.1 – Modulus of Elasticity, BIS

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