Shrinkage of concrete is directly proportional to:

Drying shrinkage of concrete is directly proportional to:

A. Cement content
B. Aggregate content
C. Water-cement ratio
D. Aggregate-cement ratio
Correct Answer: A. Cement content

📚 Detailed Explanation: Shrinkage Directly Proportional to Cement Content

Why A (Cement content) is correct: Drying shrinkage is a property of the cement paste, not the aggregate. Since aggregate particles do not shrink, the total shrinkage of concrete increases as the cement content (and hence paste volume) increases. More cement = more paste = more material that shrinks on drying. Aggregate acts as a rigid restraint that reduces total shrinkage relative to plain paste.

Why Cement Content Drives Shrinkage

Factor Effect on Shrinkage Reason
Cement content (higher) More shrinkage More paste = more shrinkable material; paste shrinks, aggregate does not
Aggregate content (higher) Less shrinkage Aggregate restrains paste shrinkage; stiffer aggregates provide more restraint
w/c ratio (higher) More shrinkage More free water to evaporate; more capillary pores
Aggregate-cement ratio (higher) Less shrinkage Higher aggregate/paste ratio means less shrinkable paste per unit volume

Understanding the Proportionality

Scenario Cement Content (kg/m³) Relative Shrinkage
Lean mix (1:4:8) ≈ 190 Low (less paste volume; more aggregate restraint)
Standard M25 mix ≈ 320 Moderate
Rich structural mix ≈ 400 High (more paste; more shrinkage)
High-strength M60+ ≈ 450–500 Very high; shrinkage-reducing admixtures recommended
Aggregate Restraint Factor (approximate):
Shrinkage of paste alone = εp (≈ 0.0008–0.001)
Shrinkage of concrete = εc (≈ 0.0003 per IS 456)
Ratio = εc / εp ≈ 0.3–0.4

Restraint provided by aggregate reduces paste shrinkage by 60–70%.
Higher aggregate content → higher restraint → less concrete shrinkage.

  • Shrinkage is directly proportional to cement content (more paste = more shrinkage).
  • Aggregate is inert to shrinkage and actually restrains paste shrinkage.
  • To minimise shrinkage: reduce cement content (within durability limits), reduce w/c, increase aggregate content, use stiff aggregates.

← Back to MCQs on Physical Quality of Concrete

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top