Proper experimental knowledge about the porosity and water absorption capacity of a coarse aggregate is required as its affects the durability of concrete because of: I. Freezing and thawing II. Reaction with chemically reactive fluids III. Increasing the workability of concrete

Proper experimental knowledge about the porosity and water absorption capacity of a coarse aggregate is required as its affects the durability of concrete because of:
I. Freezing and thawing
II. Reaction with chemically reactive fluids
III. Increasing the workability of concrete

A. Both (i) and (ii)
B. Only (i)
C. (i), (ii), and (iii)
D. Only (ii)
Correct Answer: C. (i), (ii), and (iii)

🧱 Detailed Explanation: How Aggregate Porosity Affects Concrete Durability

Porosity refers to the ratio of void volume to total aggregate volume. Porous aggregates absorb water and other liquids, which then participate in three distinct degradation mechanisms — all of which impair concrete durability. This is why measuring water absorption (IS 2386 Part III) is a mandatory pre-qualification test for aggregates.

Why all three statements (i), (ii), and (iii) are correct:
I. Freezing and thawing: Water absorbed in aggregate pores expands approximately 9% by volume when it freezes. This internal hydraulic pressure causes progressive micro-cracking in both the aggregate and surrounding cement paste, eventually leading to spalling — especially in cold climates with repeated freeze-thaw cycles.

II. Chemically reactive fluids: Porous aggregates allow aggressive chemicals — sulphates, chlorides, acids — to penetrate the concrete matrix. Sulphates react with the cement to form expansive ettringite, while chlorides accelerate reinforcement corrosion. High porosity = more chemical attack pathways.

III. Workability: Dry, porous aggregates absorb mixing water, reducing the effective water available for workability. This changes the designed water-to-cement ratio and makes the fresh mix stiffer than intended — affecting placement and compaction quality.

Three Ways Porosity Affects Concrete

Mechanism Process Effect on Concrete
Freezing & thawing Absorbed water expands ~9% on freezing → internal pressure Cracking, spalling, progressive disintegration
Chemical attack Aggressive fluids (SO42−, Cl) penetrate pores Expansive reactions, reinforcement corrosion
Workability Pores steal mixing water from the paste Reduced workability; actual w/c ratio changed

Key Concepts for Students

  • The Saturated Surface Dry (SSD) condition is the reference state in mix design: aggregate that neither absorbs nor contributes water. Dry aggregate below SSD must be corrected for in batching.
  • IS 383 limits water absorption to ≤2% for coarse aggregates to ensure good freeze-thaw and chemical durability.
  • All three mechanisms are genuine — options A (both i and ii) and B (only i) are incorrect because they exclude one or more valid mechanisms.
  • For structures in aggressive environments (coastal, marine, industrial), aggregate absorption is a critical durability parameter that must be tested and controlled.

← Back to MCQs on Ingredients of Concrete

Leave a Comment

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

Scroll to Top