Void Volume Under Slab Calculator

Quantify hidden gaps before you pour or grout. See area, depth, and adjusted volumes instantly. Download reports to keep estimates consistent on site today.

Inputs
Use consistent units for length, width, and depths.
Switching units does not convert existing entries.
Enter a valid length.
Enter a valid width.
Not used in volume, helpful for records.
Use the mean of probe readings.
Enter a valid depth.
Percent of slab area affected by voids.
Enter 0–100.
1.00 uniform; higher for irregular cavities.
Enter a value above zero.
Allow for uncertainty and minor losses.
Enter 0–50.
Bleed, migration paths, pump priming, washout.
Enter 0–50.
For granular fill volume to place before compaction.
Enter 0–40.
Reset
Example data table
Sample inputs and outputs for a typical slab.
Item Value Unit Notes
Slab length12.000mMeasured edge-to-edge.
Slab width8.000mMeasured edge-to-edge.
Average void depth0.100mAverage of probe points.
Void coverage35.00%Mapped from sounding grid.
Shape factor1.050Irregularity adjustment.
Contingency7.00%Uncertainty allowance.
Void volume with contingency3.150Target estimate for reporting.

Your results will vary with coverage and depth variability across the slab.

Formula used
  • Area = L × W
  • Void‑covered area = Area × (Coverage ÷ 100)
  • Gross void volume = Void‑covered area × Average void depth
  • Adjusted void volume = Gross void volume × Shape factor
  • Void volume with contingency = Adjusted void volume × (1 + Contingency ÷ 100)
  • Plan grout volume = With contingency × (1 + Overfill ÷ 100)
  • Plan granular volume = With contingency × (1 + Compaction ÷ 100)

Use shape factor to reflect irregular cavities, honeycombing, or interconnected channels.

How to use this calculator
  1. Measure slab length and width along the plan edges.
  2. Probe or scan to estimate average void depth beneath the slab.
  3. Estimate void coverage by mapping affected zones as a percentage.
  4. Set shape factor: 1.00 for uniform gaps, higher for irregular voids.
  5. Add contingency for uncertainty; add overfill or compaction as needed.
  6. Click Calculate to view results under the header.
  7. Use the CSV or PDF options to share a clean report.
Practical drivers behind void formation under slabs

Voids typically develop from poorly compacted subgrade, washout from groundwater movement, shrinkage of granular layers, or loss of fines through piping. Even small gaps reduce bearing contact, concentrate stresses, and can trigger cracking, rocking, or joint faulting. Quantifying volume helps select the right repair approach, batching plan, and pump strategy.

Field inputs that control accuracy

The most important variables are average void depth and percent coverage. Depth should come from multiple probe points, GPR interpretations, or lift measurements from localized coring. Coverage should reflect mapped zones, not the full slab, because repairs are often staged by bays. Shape factor accounts for irregular cavities and interconnected channels.

Planning grout or fill placement quantities

The calculator reports a baseline void volume plus a contingency allowance for uncertainty and minor losses. When planning cementitious grout, the overfill percentage adds margin for bleed, migration paths, hose priming, and unavoidable spillage. For granular placement, the compaction allowance estimates the loose volume required to achieve the final compacted state.

Quality control and constructability checks

Compare the planned volume with expected delivery limits per shift, pump rates, and access constraints. Track injected or placed quantities by zone, and re-check elevations for slab lift or settlement. If the required volume is unexpectedly high, confirm depth readings and verify that coverage is not overstated.

Example data and interpretation

Example: Length 12 m, width 8 m, average void depth 0.10 m, coverage 35%, shape factor 1.05, contingency 7%, overfill 5%, compaction 0%.

  • Slab area = 96.000 m²; void-covered area = 33.600 m²
  • Gross void = 3.360 m³; adjusted = 3.528 m³
  • With contingency ≈ 3.775 m³; grout plan (5% overfill) ≈ 3.964 m³
FAQs

1) How do I estimate void coverage reliably?

Map affected zones using sounding, GPR interpretation, or observed settlement patterns. Convert the mapped area to a percentage of total slab area. Avoid guessing full-area coverage unless evidence supports it.

2) What shape factor should I use?

Use 1.00 for uniform gaps. Use 1.05–1.15 for irregular cavities or variable depths. Use higher values only when field evidence shows interconnected channels or significant uncertainty.

3) Why include contingency if I already measured depth?

Depth and coverage vary across the slab, and measurements sample only portions. Contingency accounts for unseen pockets, minor losses, and practical batching constraints, helping prevent under-ordering.

4) When should I use grout overfill?

Use it when pumping grout or flowable fill where bleed, migration, or pump priming consumes volume. Typical allowances are 3–10%, adjusted for access, hose length, and observed losses.

5) What does compaction allowance represent?

Granular materials are placed loose and compacted to a smaller final volume. The allowance estimates extra loose volume needed to achieve the compacted void fill. Use field compaction targets to refine it.

6) Can I use this for multiple void zones?

Yes. Run separate calculations for each zone using its own coverage and depth, then sum the planned volumes. This improves staging, delivery coordination, and reporting compared with one blended estimate.

7) Does slab thickness change the void volume result?

Thickness is recorded for documentation but does not change void volume. Void volume is governed by plan area, affected coverage, and average void depth. Thickness matters for structural evaluation and repair detailing.

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