Supplementary cementitious materials, SCMs for short, are an established and technically proven route to cutting the carbon impact of concrete while maintaining the performance required on site. They’re not just stand-ins for Portland cement. In many applications, they improve workability, enhance mechanical performance, and increase long-term durability.

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The Role of SCMs in Modern Concrete Design
SCMs come from industrial byproducts and processed minerals like fly ash, ground granulated blast furnace slag (GGBFS), silica fume, calcined clays, limestone powder, and emerging waste-derived materials. These materials are finely ground and either react with calcium hydroxide or act as fillers and reactive binders within the cement matrix, improving the concrete’s internal structure and overall performance over time.1
The cement industry is under pressure to cut emissions, and for good reason. Making clinker, the main ingredient in cement, releases a significant amount of CO2. For comparison, fly ash has cradle-to-gate emissions typically below 10 kg of CO2 per ton. For regular cement, values commonly exceed 300 kg.1,2,3
That’s why researchers are pushing for performance-based mix design approaches that use SCMs intentionally. The right combination of SCMs can improve strength, durability, and environmental performance, especially when design moves beyond fixed replacement percentages and focuses on how the mix actually behaves under curing and service conditions.
Hydration Mechanisms and Microstructure
So how do SCMs actually change what’s happening inside the concrete?
It starts with hydration. When Portland cement reacts with water, it forms calcium silicate hydrate (C-S-H) gel and portlandite, resulting in a microstructure that’s full of tiny pores. That porous network affects how water and aggressive agents move through the concrete, which isn’t ideal for long-term durability.1
SCMs step in here with two main benefits. First, they react with portlandite through pozzolanic activity, consuming calcium hydroxide and filling in the gaps. This leads to more C-S-H gel, a denser matrix, and fewer connected pores, which all add up to stronger, longer-lasting concrete.
Highly active materials like metakaolin and silica fume take things further by boosting early C-S-H formation and improving the interfacial transition zone (ITZ) around aggregates. There’s also promising research on materials like calcium sulfoaluminate, which can help control ettringite formation and limit issues such as the alkali–silica reaction, when properly formulated and cured.1,4
Mechanical Performance Across SCM Types
Once you understand how SCMs affect the microstructure, the next step is seeing how that plays out in terms of strength and performance. It’s not just about hitting a single compressive strength value anymore.
Engineers look at strength development over time, stiffness, and toughness. With the right mix design, binary and ternary low-carbon concretes using SCMs can match or exceed conventional compressive strengths at 28 and 90 days. Early-age strength may dip slightly, particularly at replacement levels above 20–30 %, but this can be managed with appropriate curing regimes, compatible superplasticizers, and optimized particle grading.1,2
Lab studies show that SCMs like fly ash, slag, silica fume, calcined clays, and metakaolin can significantly boost concrete’s strength when used within optimized replacement ranges. Fly ash and slag improve workability, while silica fume and metakaolin add compressive strength and durability, especially under mechanical stress, which is key for high-strength mixes.5
In one example, combining approximately 10 % metakaolin with 5 % palm ash gave a strong balance of flow, compressive strength, and tensile performance. The bottom line is that the type, reactivity, and dosage of SCMs used have a major influence on performance, and systematic performance testing is essential for effective mix design.1,6
Durability and Service Life Benefits
Stronger concrete is great, but how long it lasts matters just as much, especially when you're looking at the environmental and maintenance costs over time.
SCMs like fly ash and slag help with that, too. They reduce permeability, slow down corrosion of steel reinforcement, and increase resistance to things like chloride attack and sulfate exposure.1,3
Additionally, quaternary systems that combine multiple SCMs lead to better durability measures, including lower water absorption and reduced carbonation depth. A recent MDPI Materials article on high-performance concrete reports that quaternary mixes achieve improved cost efficiency and mechanical performance while simultaneously reducing environmental and durability risks associated with conventional cement-rich mixtures.3,4
Environmental Performance and Decarbonization
Beyond performance and durability, SCMs are one of the clearest paths to cutting the carbon footprint of concrete. By reducing clinker content and making use of industrial byproducts, SCMs help lower embodied carbon without sacrificing function.
Life cycle assessments back this up. Replacing large portions of cement with fly ash, slag, or calcined clays has been proven to cut emissions significantly. And if the mix lasts longer, then that is even better for the environment.1,2 Studies also show that SCMs work well with modern superplasticizers, which means you can lower water-to-binder ratios, improve strength, and keep emissions down all at once.2
Looking ahead, researchers are looking into even more SCM sources like volcanic materials, reclaimed concrete fines, and industrial ashes. These newer materials can expand the available resources for SCMs and aid in regional decarbonization efforts. However, their chemical composition, variability, and potential contaminants must be thoroughly characterized and managed using robust performance-based standards.1,7
Binary, Ternary, and Quaternary Blend Design
Smart mix design is where SCMs really shine. When used as active components in binary, ternary, or quaternary blends, they can work together to create stronger, denser concrete with less cement. It’s all about synergy between pozzolanic activity, filler effects, and how particles pack together.1,3
Studies show that replacing 10–25 % of cement with SCMs in binary and ternary mixes can actually improve strength and durability. Blends that include fly ash, metakaolin, or biomass ash improve both the structure and mechanical performance. Quaternary binders that mix traditional SCMs with ultrafine fillers achieve high packing density and strong filling effects, making them suitable for infrastructure projects that require durability and documented performance over time.1,3,8
Practical Adoption and Performance-based Specifications
Of course, none of this matters if the mix doesn’t perform on site. That’s why real-world adoption of SCM-rich concretes depends on consistent quality and solid performance-based standards. The focus has to be on outcomes: strength over time, permeability, durability, not just how much cement you can replace.
One challenge is that SCMs like fly ash can vary a lot depending on the source. So quality control and testing are essential to make sure they work with local materials and additives. Bringing together researchers, producers, and contractors is key to making SCMs a practical, reliable option.1,7
Recent studies suggest that combining mix design, field testing, and life cycle assessment can help translate laboratory findings into practical building methods that support both structural quality and environmental goals.1,2,7
Final Thoughts
When used with a clear understanding of their material behaviour, SCMs can both enhance concrete performance and reduce environmental impact. Their value extends beyond carbon reduction, influencing durability, service life, and long-term asset performance.
For engineers, specifiers, and construction professionals, the key takeaway is that performance-based design and testing are central to unlocking the full potential of SCMs. A deeper understanding of how different SCMs interact within blended systems provides greater control over concrete quality, durability, and sustainability outcomes.
References and Further Reading
- Khan, S. et al. (2025). Mechanical and durability behaviours of low carbon concrete: A systematic review. Journal of Building Engineering, 100, 111633. DOI:10.1016/j.jobe.2024.111633. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352710224032017
- Bhandari, I. et al. (2023). A systematic study on sustainable low carbon cement – Superplasticizer interaction: Fresh, mechanical, microstructural and durability characteristics. Heliyon, Vol. 9, Issue 9, e19176. DOI:10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e19176. https://www.cell.com/heliyon/fulltext/S2405-8440(23)06384-3
- Khan, M. I. et al. (2024). Quality Characteristics of Sustainable High-Performance Concrete Formulated from Binary, Ternary, and Quaternary Supplementary Cementitious Materials Under Various Curing Conditions. Materials, 17(23), 5831. DOI:10.3390/ma17235831. https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/17/23/5831
- Khan, A. H. et al. (2025). Editorial: Supplementary cementitious materials: Recent developments, performance insights and potential applicability. Frontiers in Materials, 12, 1608358. DOI:10.3389/fmats.2025.1608358. https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/materials/articles/10.3389/fmats.2025.1608358/full
- Khan, S. et al. (2026). Comparative study of mechanical performance and durability of concrete incorporating supplementary cementitious materials. Canadian Journal of Civil Engineering. 53: 1-13. DOI:10.1139/cjce-2025-0184. https://cdnsciencepub.com/doi/10.1139/cjce-2025-0184
- Hasan, A. et al. (2024). Properties of Mortars Incorporating Binary and Ternary Blends of Palm Ash, Silica Fume, and Metakaolin. Annales de Chimie - Science des Matériaux, Vol. 48, No. 6, pp. 831-843. DOI:10.18280/acsm.480609. https://www.iieta.org/journals/acsm/paper/10.18280/acsm.480609
- Snellings, R. et al. (2023). Future and emerging supplementary cementitious materials. Cement and Concrete Research, 171, 107199. DOI:10.1016/j.cemconres.2023.107199. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0008884623001138
- Younis, S. et al. (2025). Towards sustainable high-strength concrete: A ternary blend of alternative cementitious materials. Results in Engineering, 28, 107781. DOI:10.1016/j.rineng.2025.107781. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590123025038344
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