Increase in the moisture content in concrete at the time of mixing:

Increasing the moisture content (adding more water) in concrete at the time of mixing:

A. Reduces the strength
B. Increases the strength
C. Does not change the strength
D. None of these
Correct Answer: A. Reduces the strength

📚 Detailed Explanation: More Mixing Water Reduces Concrete Strength

Why A (Reduces the strength) is correct: The compressive strength of concrete is inversely related to the water-cement (w/c) ratio — this is Abrams' Law. Adding excess moisture at mixing raises the w/c ratio. The extra water does not hydrate additional cement (there is a limit to how much water cement can combine with); instead it remains as free water in the paste and evaporates after hardening, creating capillary voids that reduce strength.

Abrams’ Law: Strength vs. w/c Ratio

Abrams' Law (approximate):
f = K1 / K2^(w/c)

Where: f = 28-day compressive strength
K1 ≈ 97 MPa, K2 ≈ 4.0 (typical for OPC at standard conditions)

Effect of raising w/c by 0.1:
w/c 0.40 → f ≈ 42 MPa
w/c 0.50 → f ≈ 31 MPa (-26%)
w/c 0.60 → f ≈ 23 MPa (-45%)
w/c 0.70 → f ≈ 17 MPa (-60%)

What Excess Water Does in Concrete

Fate of Excess Water Effect on Concrete
Chemically combined (hydration water) Required for C-S-H formation; contributes to strength (w/c ≈0.23–0.25 for full hydration)
Excess free water (above hydration requirement) Remains in capillary pores; evaporates on drying → capillary voids → reduced strength and increased permeability

Strength vs. w/c for M25 Concrete

w/c Ratio Approximate 28-day Strength (MPa) Remarks
0.40 38–42 Low water; dense; strong; IS 456 severe exposure
0.50 28–33 Standard M25 design; IS 456 moderate exposure
0.60 20–25 Higher water; marginal for M25; not recommended
0.70+ <18 Excess water; segregation likely; not structural
  • Increasing moisture content at mixing reduces strength (Abrams' Law: strength inversely proportional to w/c ratio).
  • Excess water leaves capillary voids on evaporation → porous, weak concrete.
  • IS 456:2000: maximum w/c for mild exposure = 0.55; severe = 0.45; very severe = 0.45; extreme = 0.40.

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