For a constant water cement ratio, decrease in aggregate cement ratio causes

For a constant water cement ratio, decrease in aggregate cement ratio causes

A. Increase in workability
B. Decrease in workability
C. No change in workability
D. None of these
Correct Answer: A. Increase in workability

📚 Detailed Explanation: Decreasing A/C Ratio Increases Workability

Why A (Increase in workability) is correct: The aggregate-to-cement ratio (A/C) is the volume of aggregate relative to cement. At constant w/c:
Low A/C ratio = more cement per unit aggregate = more paste volume = better workability.
High A/C ratio = less cement per unit aggregate = less paste = aggregate particles less lubricated = lower workability.
Physically: cement paste coats aggregate particles. A decreasing A/C ratio means each aggregate particle gets a thicker paste coating, reducing inter-particle friction and enabling easier flow. This is why rich mixes (low A/C) are more workable than lean mixes (high A/C) at the same w/c.

A/C Ratio vs. Workability

A/C Ratio Workability (at const. w/c)
Decreasing A/C Increases (more paste = more lubricant)
Increasing A/C Decreases (less paste per aggregate)
  • Decreasing A/C ratio at constant w/c → more paste → increased workability.
  • However, rich mixes (low A/C) may be prone to shrinkage and are more expensive.

← Back to MCQs on Workability of Concrete

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