The 28 day’s cube strength of mass concrete using aggregates of maximum size 5cm for gravity dams should be:

The 28-day cube strength of mass concrete using aggregates of maximum size 5 cm for gravity dams should be:

A. Between 150 to 300 kg/sq.cm
B. Between 350 to 600 kg/sq.cm
C. Between 150 to 500 kg/sq.cm
D. Below 200 kg/sq.cm
Correct Answer: D. Below 200 kg/sq.cm

📚 Detailed Explanation: Concrete Strength for Gravity Dams

Why D (Below 200 kg/cm²) is correct: Gravity dams resist hydrostatic force through their own weight. The concrete does not need to be high-strength — it needs to be:
1. Mass-efficient (high density to provide weight)
2. Low heat of hydration (large pour volume → thermal cracking risk)
3. Durable (water-retaining structure)
These requirements lead to mixes with low cement content, large aggregates (≥ 50 mm up to 150 mm), and relatively low 28-day strength — typically below 200 kg/cm² (≈ 20 N/mm²).

Mass Concrete for Gravity Dams vs. Structural Concrete

Property Mass Concrete (Gravity Dam) Structural Concrete (RCC)
28-day strength Below 200 kg/cm² (<20 N/mm²) M20–M40 (20–40 N/mm²)
Aggregate size Up to 150 mm 20–40 mm
Cement content Low (150–200 kg/m³) Higher (300–450 kg/m³)
Heat of hydration Minimised (critical concern) Less critical
Design philosophy Gravity (weight-dependent) Structural (strength-dependent)
  • Gravity dam mass concrete: 28-day cube strength = below 200 kg/cm².
  • Primary focus is on controlling heat of hydration, not maximising strength.

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