● Steel rebar, short for reinforcing bar, is a steel rod used to strengthen concrete structures. Made primarily from carbon steel, it features ridges or deformations on its surface to bond tightly with concrete.
● Classified by strength and composition, common grades include ASTM A615 (carbon steel) and A706 (low-alloy). It enhances concrete’s tensile strength—critical since concrete is strong in compression but weak in tension.
● Widely used in construction for buildings, bridges, roads, and foundations, rebar comes in various diameters and lengths. It’s often tied into grids before concrete pouring, ensuring structural integrity under stress, loads, or environmental forces.
HRB500 and HRB500E are high-strength Chinese standard deformed steel rebars, designed for demanding reinforced concrete structures. Both boast a minimum yield strength of 500 MPa, with surface ribs ensuring excellent concrete bonding. HRB500E offers enhanced ductility and toughness, meeting stricter seismic and low-temperature performance criteria, ideal for critical infrastructure in high-risk zones. Widely used in large-scale construction—bridges, high-rises, and heavy-duty structures—they provide superior load-bearing capacity, reducing material usage while ensuring durability, making them key for efficient, high-performance modern building projects.