Bleeding is good to an extent if it occurs when concrete is:

Bleeding is considered acceptable to a limited extent if it occurs when the concrete is:

A. Transported
B. Mixed
C. Plastic
D. Placed
Correct Answer: C. Plastic

📚 Detailed Explanation: Minor Bleeding Acceptable Only in Plastic State

Why C (Plastic) is correct: Bleeding (upward migration of free water to the concrete surface) is a natural phenomenon caused by the settlement of solids in the fresh concrete. A very small degree of bleeding while the concrete is still plastic (freshly placed, still fluid) is acceptable — it slightly lubricates the surface for screeding and floating. However, excessive bleeding is always harmful.

Bleeding at Different Stages

Stage Bleeding Effect Acceptability
During transport Water rises in the transit mixer drum or truck Undesirable — alters w/c ratio; causes segregation if severe
During mixing Water visible on surface immediately after mixing Indicates too high w/c; undesirable
Plastic state (freshly placed) Minor water film on surface; concrete still workable Tolerable in small amounts; helps surface finishing
After initial set Water trapped below aggregate; capillary channels form Undesirable — creates permeable channels after drying

Consequences of Excessive Bleeding

Effect Detail
Laitance formation Weak layer of cement paste and fines on top surface; easily dusts off
Increased permeability Bleed water channels remain as capillary voids after drying
Bond reduction Water collects under reinforcement bars and under aggregate particles → weak interface zones
Reduced surface strength Top layer has higher w/c (diluted) → lower strength than the rest of the section
  • Minor bleeding in the plastic state only is acceptable; excessive bleeding is always harmful.
  • Never trowel bleed water back into the surface — wait for it to evaporate first.
  • Reduce bleeding by: lower w/c ratio, use of finer cement, air entrainment, or reducing water content.

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