Silage, Fertiliser and Chemical Exposure
Silage effluent, liquid fertilisers and agricultural chemicals can gradually attack unprotected concrete floors in clamps, stores and handling areas. We design and refurbish agricultural floors using engineered concrete slabs, specialist resurfacing systems and polished concrete lanes selected to cope with aggressive liquids, wash water and repeated cleaning in farm environments.
20 +
Years
Protecting Farm Store Floors from Chemicals
Silage acids and fertiliser solutions are more than simple spill risks. They can soften concrete, open up the surface paste and expose aggregate, especially where liquids sit in low spots or along joints. This article looks at how chemical exposure develops on farm floors, the patterns of damage to watch for, and how refurbishment schemes can be planned alongside moisture control and traffic loading in agricultural storage buildings.
Article Focus
How Silage Acids and Fertilisers Attack Concrete Floors
Silage clamps, liquid fertiliser stores and spray-loading areas expose concrete to acids, alkalis and concentrated salts. Silage effluent can sit on the floor for extended periods, especially where falls are shallow or drains stand proud of the surface. Liquid fertilisers or chemical mixes may be spilled during filling and mixing. Over time, these liquids can break down the cement paste at the surface, leading to soft patches, exposed aggregate and widening joints where liquids linger.
Floors exposed to these conditions need more than simple strength. They require a combination of
well detailed slab construction,
chemically tolerant resurfacing
and practical detailing that works with
moisture control measures. Where the same building is also used for crop storage or loading, approaches taken for
grain pushers and telehandlers
and
surface texture planning
must be considered alongside chemical exposure.
Typical Chemical Exposure on Farm Store Floors
Floor Problems from Silage Acids and Chemical Exposure
Concrete often tolerates occasional minor spills, but repeated exposure to silage acids, fertilisers and other farm chemicals can create a recognisable pattern of damage. Left unchecked, this can affect hygiene, slip resistance and, eventually, the structural profile of the floor.
Soft, friable surface areas where the cement paste has been attacked by aggressive liquids.
Exposed aggregate in traffic routes where chemicals and turning forces act together.
Pitting and localised craters around drains, gullies or low spots that collect effluent.
Discoloured bands along joints and wall bases where liquids sit or track during wash-down.
Flaking coatings that have lost adhesion after repeated contact with silage or fertiliser.
Uneven surfaces that complicate cleaning, increase slip risk and trap residues in rough patches.
Our Process
STAGE 1
We start by identifying where silage effluent, fertilisers and other chemicals actually contact the floor. This includes staining patterns, soft areas, pitting and the behaviour of existing coatings or repairs. We review how silage clamps are used, how tanks and sprayers are filled, and how wash-down is carried out so the most exposed zones can be clearly defined rather than treating the whole building the same way.
STAGE 2
Using the survey findings, we propose a floor strategy that may combine new slab sections in badly damaged zones with targeted chemically tolerant resurfacing elsewhere. Falls can be adjusted to direct liquids towards drains, while wall and joint junctions are detailed to reduce liquid hold-up. In traffic routes and corridors connecting to crop stores, polished concrete lanes can support cleaning and dust control while still tying into the approaches used for cereal handling and moisture management in related stores.
STAGE 3
Works are sequenced around silage and spreading timetables so that key areas are available when needed. On completion, we discuss cleaning products, wash-down volumes and inspection routines that support the new floor surface. Simple visual checks for early softening or staining can then be built into everyday practice, helping protect the slab and finishes through future seasons of chemical exposure.
Most chemical damage is concentrated in a few key areas such as clamps, mixing bays and loading points. Focusing protection and resurfacing on these zones often delivers greater benefit than trying to treat every square metre of concrete in the same way.
Long contact times do more harm than brief spills. Adjusting falls, drain positions and detailing at wall bases reduces the amount of silage effluent and fertiliser solution that can sit on the slab and slowly attack the surface.
Detergents and disinfectants may interact with silage residues and other chemicals on the floor. Selecting cleaning products that suit both the storage activity and the chosen resurfacing system helps avoid unexpected softening or discolouration over time.
Many agricultural buildings combine crop storage, livestock access and chemical handling. Floors that acknowledge these overlapping uses, and link to wider planning on moisture, surface texture and traffic patterns, are more likely to maintain consistent performance season after season.
If silage acids, fertilisers or other chemicals are starting to soften or pit your concrete floors, an early review can prevent local problems turning into wider slab damage.
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