Ferrocement Panel Calculator: Complete Design Guide
What is Ferrocement?
Ferrocement is a thin composite material consisting of multiple layers of wire mesh embedded in a rich portland cement mortar matrix. Panels are typically 12–40mm thick — far thinner than conventional reinforced concrete — while achieving high strength-to-weight ratios and excellent watertightness.
Originally developed for boat construction, ferrocement is now widely used for water tanks, roofing panels, housing slabs, and emergency construction. Its low cost, minimal formwork requirements, and hand-applicable nature make it particularly valuable in resource-constrained settings.
Wire Mesh Design
Standard ferrocement uses 2–4 layers of hexagonal (chicken) wire (19–14 gauge, 25mm aperture) or welded square mesh. The key parameter is steel volume fraction ρ — the ratio of wire cross-section area to mortar cross-section area. For structural panels, ρ = 0.8–1.5% is optimal; for water tanks and boats, ρ = 1.5–3.0%.
Mortar Mix Design
A 1:2 cement:sand mortar with w/c 0.35–0.42 is standard for structural ferrocement. Low w/c is critical for waterproofness. Use a plasticiser if workability is insufficient. Apply mortar in thin layers from both faces, working it through the mesh. 28-day strength typically 35–50 MPa.
AdvertisementShow More
Panel Strength
Flexural strength = 0.6√f'c + (σ_steel × ρ_steel / 6). At ρ = 1.5% with f'c 40 MPa and wire yield 500 MPa, flexural strength ≈ 8–12 MPa. This is 2–3× higher than plain mortar. Tensile cracking strength = 0.5√f'c + σ_y × ρ × 0.5.
FAQs
How thick should a ferrocement water tank be?
Ferrocement water tanks are typically 15–25mm thick with 2–3 layers of hexagonal wire mesh. A 20mm panel with 1:2 mortar at w/c 0.38 achieves excellent watertightness. Additional crystalline waterproofing treatment (e.g. Xypex) is recommended for potable water storage.
How many layers of wire mesh for ferrocement?
Two layers is the minimum for structural panels; 3–4 layers is standard for water tanks, boats, and load-bearing applications. Beyond 4 layers, mortar penetration becomes difficult and additional layers provide diminishing strength returns.
How long does ferrocement take to cure?
Ferrocement panels should be kept continuously moist for minimum 7 days, ideally 28 days. Cover with wet hessian or polythene sheeting. Strength develops rapidly — 70% of 28-day strength is typically reached by day 7 under proper curing.