Study the following statement: I. For constant w/c ratio, finer sand decreases the workability. II. Creep is the deformation of concrete under sustained loading. The correct statement(s) is /are:

Study the following statements: I. For constant w/c ratio, finer sand decreases the workability. II. Creep is the deformation of concrete under sustained loading. Which is/are correct?

A. Only I
B. Only II
C. Both I and II
D. Neither (I) nor (II) is true
Correct Answer: C. Both I and II

📚 Detailed Explanation: Finer Sand, Workability, and Creep

This question tests two separate concepts: how sand fineness affects workability at constant w/c, and the definition of creep in concrete.

Why C (Both I and II) is correct:
Statement I — Finer sand decreases workability at constant w/c: Finer sand (Zone III or IV) has a much higher specific surface area than coarser sand. At a constant w/c ratio, the available water is the same. But finer sand needs more water to wet all its surfaces; with the same water amount spread over a larger surface, there is less free water to lubricate flow. Result: workability decreases despite the same w/c ratio.

Statement II — Creep is deformation under sustained loading: Creep is the long-term, time-dependent increase in strain (deformation) that occurs when concrete is subjected to a constant sustained stress. Unlike elastic deformation (immediate), creep develops over months to years.

Quick Reference

Concept Definition / Effect
Finer sand at constant w/c Decreases workability (more surface to wet)
Creep Time-dependent deformation under sustained load
Shrinkage Volume change due to moisture loss (no load needed)

Key Concepts for Students

  • Finer sand + constant w/c = lower workability — to restore workability with finer sand, either raise w/c or add admixture.
  • Creep = deformation under sustained load (time-dependent); elastic deformation = instantaneous recovery.
  • Shrinkage and creep both contribute to long-term deflections in concrete structures — IS 456 accounts for both in serviceability checks.

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