The phenomenon of increase in the volume of a given mass of sand caused by the films of water pushing the sand particles apart is referred to as:

The phenomenon of increase in the volume of a given mass of sand caused by the films of water pushing the sand particles apart is referred to as:

A. Water absorption
B. Leaching
C. Bulking
D. Chalking
Correct Answer: C. Bulking

📚 Detailed Explanation: Bulking of Sand

Why C (Bulking) is correct:
Water absorption (A): The water taken into the pores of aggregate particles — not related to volume increase.
Leaching (B): Removal of soluble salts from concrete/soil by water flow — completely different phenomenon.
Bulking (C): Exactly the described phenomenon — thin moisture films create surface tension between particles, holding them apart and increasing apparent volume. This is the correct answer.
Chalking (D): Surface disintegration of concrete producing a powdery dust — a durability defect, not related to sand moisture.

The Bulking Mechanism

Moisture State Bulking Reason
Bone dry (0%) 0% No water film — particles settle together
Slightly moist (2–3%) 10–20% Thin film begins to push particles apart
Peak (4–6%) 20–35% Maximum surface tension → maximum volume
Very wet (10%+) Decreasing Excess water floods voids; particles settle
Saturated (submerged) ~0% No surface tension; back to base volume
  • Bulking = volume increase of moist sand due to surface tension of water films between particles.
  • Maximum bulking at ~5% moisture content; volume can increase by up to 30–40%.
  • Fine sand bulks more than coarse sand (higher surface area = more water-film-per-unit-volume effect).

← Back to MCQs on Proportioning of Concrete Mixes

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