Which of the following statements is true?

Which of the following statements is true?

A. The quality of water governs the strength of concrete
B. The quantity of water required for concreting, depends upon the grading of aggregate and method of compaction
C. 10% excess of water reduces the strength of concrete by 15%
D. All option are correct
Correct Answer: D. All option are correct

📚 Detailed Explanation: Role of Water in Concrete Strength

Water in concrete serves two roles: it activates cement hydration (chemical role) and provides workability (physical role). Both the quality and quantity of water are critical. All three statements in this question capture important and distinct truths about how water governs concrete performance.

Why D (All option are correct) is correct: Statement A is correct — impure water introduces chlorides, sulphates, or organic matter that disrupt hydration and reduce strength (IS 456 sets permissible impurity limits). Statement B is correct — well-graded aggregates need less water to achieve the same workability; mechanical compaction also reduces the water needed. Statement C is correct — concrete strength is inversely related to the water-cement ratio (Abrams’ law); adding 10% extra water raises the w/c ratio enough to reduce compressive strength by ≈15%.

Water–Cement Ratio and Strength Relationship

Factor Effect on Concrete
Poor quality water (high solids) Disrupts hydration; reduces strength and durability
Poorly graded aggregate More water needed for workability; higher w/c ratio
10% excess water Raises w/c; ≈15% strength reduction
Good compaction Achieves same density with less water

Key Concepts for Students

  • Abrams’ Law: Compressive strength = A / Bw/c — strength decreases as w/c ratio increases, for fully compacted concrete.
  • IS 456:2000 specifies maximum w/c ratios (e.g., 0.45 for M25 in moderate exposure) precisely to control this effect.
  • Quality checks per IS 456: pH ≥6, TDS ≤15,000 ppm, sulphates ≤400 mg/litre, chlorides ≤2000 mg/litre for RCC.

← Back to MCQs on Ingredients of Concrete

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