Segregation can be defined as the tendency of:

Segregation in concrete can be defined as the tendency of:

A. Water to separate from the concrete mix
B. Coarse aggregate to separate from the mortar
C. Fine aggregate to separate from concrete
D. Air bubbles to rise to the surface
Correct Answer: B. Coarse aggregate to separate from the mortar

📚 Detailed Explanation: Segregation — Coarse Aggregate Separating from Mortar

Why B is correct: Segregation is defined as the tendency of the constituent materials of concrete to separate. Specifically, it is the separation of coarse aggregate from the cement-sand mortar. This is because the coarse aggregate (density ≈2650 kg/m³) is the heaviest and most discrete constituent; it is most prone to rolling away or settling out when the mortar cannot hold it in suspension.

Segregation vs. Other Concrete Defects

Defect Definition What Separates
Segregation Loss of homogeneity due to coarse aggregate separating from mortar Coarse aggregate from cement-sand mortar
Bleeding Free water rises to surface Water + fine particles (upward)
Laitance Weak surface layer formed by bleed water Fine cement + water (surface deposit)
Honeycombing Voids left by coarse aggregate not surrounded by mortar Result of severe segregation + poor compaction

Root Causes of Segregation

Cause Why It Causes Segregation
High w/c ratio (wet mix) Low paste viscosity; cannot suspend heavy aggregate
Dropping concrete >1.5 m Impact energy causes aggregate to bounce away from mortar
Over-vibration Liquefies mix; aggregate sinks under gravity
Poorly graded aggregate Single-size or gap-graded; high void content; poor suspension
Large maximum aggregate size Heavier particles; settle faster (Stokes' Law: V ∝ d²)
  • Segregation = tendency of coarse aggregate to separate from the mortar.
  • IS 456:2000: maximum drop height for concrete placement = 1.5 m to prevent segregation.
  • Segregation causes voids: 5% voids → 30%+ strength reduction.

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