For flatwork crews, paving contractors, flooring teams, and facility owners, few slab issues cause more frustration—or long-term cost—than curling and warping. A floor may look perfect at placement, only to begin lifting at the joints, rocking under forklifts, or losing FF/FL values during the first months of service.
These distortions aren’t random defects or “bad luck.” Curling and warping are predictable outcomes driven by the moisture and temperature gradients inside the slab. When the top dries or shrinks faster than the bottom, the panel bends. Once that movement begins, it can be very difficult—and expensive—to correct.
The good news? Curling is preventable. But the most effective strategies focus on internal moisture management, not simply surface curing or thickening the slab. This is where internal curing technologies, including nano-silica–based admixtures such as E5® Internal Cure, have become valuable tools to help reduce shrinkage-related distortion.
This article covers the science behind curling, why common fixes often fall short, and the advanced strategies professionals use today to maintain flatness, preserve FF/FL, and reduce rework.
Concrete curling is caused by non-uniform volume change through the depth of a slab. Anywhere moisture or temperature conditions vary from top to bottom, differential shrinkage creates internal stresses that force the slab to bend.
The most common contributors include:
Wind, sun, low humidity, or inadequate curing allow the surface to dry and shrink more than the interior.
The slab surface can heat or cool more rapidly than the bottom, especially in exterior placements or buildings without HVAC control.
Low water-to-cement ratio mixes—while stronger and more durable—often shrink more aggressively if internal moisture is not controlled.
Sudden drops in humidity or rises in temperature during early-age curing increase surface shrinkage.
Edges, corners, and joints dry faster and shrink more because they have more exposed surface area.
The results are familiar:
Corners lift
Joints open
Forklifts rock
FF/FL numbers fall
Slab edges crack or spall
Grinding and patching become recurring costs
Traditional approaches try to contain these consequences, but most fail to address the underlying mechanism: internal moisture and shrinkage imbalance.
Contractors have long used design and structural solutions to “fight” curling:
Tighter joint spacing
Increased reinforcement
Thicker slabs
Fibers
Load-transfer devices
While these strategies help manage movement, they do not reduce differential shrinkage—they merely attempt to restrain it.
Surface-only curing (wet curing, blankets, curing compounds) is also essential, but it protects only the top fraction of the slab. Once hydration consumes internal mixing water, the core begins losing moisture faster than the surface can be replenished.
This is why even well-cured slabs often curl over time.
Internal curing is the practice of supplying additional, distributed curing water within the slab—rather than relying only on external water or surface membranes. It is not new in principle, but modern admixture technology has made it far more practical and consistent on real-world pours.
Internal curing works by:
Reducing early-age autogenous shrinkage
Maintaining a more uniform moisture gradient
Supporting deeper hydration
Minimizing differential volume change between top and bottom
Nano-silica–based internal curing admixtures—such as E5® Internal Cure—are examples of materials engineered to help retain and manage internal moisture (also referred to as “water of transport”) to support more uniform drying.
Because the entire cross-section is better supported, slabs see fewer moisture gradients, meaning fewer internal stresses that lead to curling.
The core mechanism behind internal curing–based curling reduction is simple:
more uniform hydration = more uniform shrinkage = less slab distortion.
For example, internal curing admixtures like E5® Internal Cure help:
They slow internal water loss during hydration, supporting more complete cement hydration and reducing porosity.
By internally supporting the concrete matrix, the edges and joints shrink less during the critical early-age period when most curling begins.
A finer, denser pore structure leads to more stable slab dimensions.
This is the key to reducing upward or downward bending.
Internal curing does not eliminate the need for good curing practices, but it significantly reduces how reliant the slab is on moisture applied only at the surface.
When the entire slab—not just the top—is protected during hydration, curling is dramatically reduced.
Curling directly affects measured flatness:
FF evaluates short-wave bumps and dips
FL evaluates long-wave undulations
As slabs bend, edges lift and the effective flatness falls. This leads to grinding, patching, joint filling, and callbacks.
Internal curing has shown consistent ability to support:
By reducing early shrinkage-related distortion.
Slabs move less over time when hydration is more complete and uniform.
A denser, better-hydrated microstructure improves surface hardness and resistance to wheel loads.
Reduced curling also reduces joint rocking, spalling, and load-transfer distress—issues that affect floors long before moisture or pH become limiting factors.
When internal curing is paired with a surface densification or pH-control strategy (for instance, systems such as E5® Catalyst used during finishing), the slab benefits both internally and at the surface where adhesives and coverings are most sensitive.
This dual-layer approach supports long-term flooring success without relying on late-stage moisture mitigation systems.
Internal curing helps reduce curling by stabilizing moisture throughout the slab and reducing early-age shrinkage—especially at edges and joints. More uniform hydration results in more uniform volume change, which directly reduces bending.
Internal curing significantly reduces the reliance on surface-only curing. Some internal curing admixtures—such as E5® Internal Cure—have been tested and can qualify as a curing compound under ASTM C156-20, reducing or eliminating the need for wet curing depending on the specification.
Absolutely. Internal curing does not replace good design fundamentals. Proper joint layout, load-transfer design, subgrade support, and reinforcement selection remain essential. Internal curing works alongside these strategies to reduce the shrinkage component of slab movement.
Internal curing generally supports strength development by enhancing hydration and reducing micro-cracking. A denser matrix also correlates with improved durability, permeability, and abrasion resistance.
Curling and warping are driven by internal moisture gradients, not surface finishing errors or bad luck. Surface-only curing is important—but insufficient—because it addresses only the topmost portion of the slab.
Advanced moisture-control strategies, especially internal curing approaches, help stabilize the whole cross-section by:
Supporting deeper hydration
Reducing autogenous and drying shrinkage
Minimizing differential movement
Preserving FF/FL
Reducing rework
Internal curing systems—such as nano-silica–based technologies including E5® Internal Cure—offer specifiers and contractors a modern tool to help achieve flatter, more stable floors.
For a more detailed look at internal curing strategies, moisture management, and their impact on schedule and slab performance, explore:
It provides practical insights on:
Integrating internal curing into mix designs
Reducing curling at joints and edges
Improving dimensional stability and FF/FL
Minimizing late-stage moisture mitigation work
Creating more predictable slab performance for owners