Separation of coarse aggregates from mortar during transportation is known as:

Separation of coarse aggregates from mortar during transportation of concrete is known as:

A. Bleeding
B. Creeping
C. Segregation
D. Shrinkage
Correct Answer: C. Segregation

📚 Detailed Explanation: Segregation — Coarse Aggregate Separating from Mortar

Why C (Segregation) is correct: Segregation is defined as the separation of the constituent materials of a concrete mix. When coarse aggregate (being heavier) separates from the cement-sand mortar during transportation, jolting over rough terrain, or dropping from height, the concrete loses its homogeneity and its quality is severely compromised.

Types of Segregation in Concrete

Type What Separates Primary Cause
Type 1 (most common) Coarse aggregate separates and rolls away from mortar Dropping from height >1.5 m; rough transport; over-vibration
Type 2 Cement paste separates from aggregate matrix Highly wet mixes (high slump); excess water

Distinguishing Key Concrete Defect Terms

Term Definition What Moves/Separates
Segregation Separation of concrete constituents Coarse aggregate from mortar
Bleeding Water rising to concrete surface Free mix water (upward migration)
Creeping Slow lateral soil movement under load Not a concrete term
Shrinkage Volume reduction on drying Dimensional change, not separation

Effects and Prevention of Segregation

Effect Prevention
Voids increase in concrete Do not drop concrete >1.5 m (IS 456:2000)
Homogeneity destroyed Correct w/c ratio; use transit mixer for long hauls
2% voids → 10% strength loss Proper gradation of aggregates; avoid wet mixes
5% voids → 30%+ strength loss No over-vibration; max slump 50 mm when vibrating
  • Segregation = coarse aggregate separating from mortar during transportation or handling.
  • IS 456:2000: concrete must not be dropped from a height exceeding 1.5 m (150 cm).
  • Adding excess water to concrete increases segregation risk significantly.

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