Which of the following is a limitation of lightweight concrete when compared to conventional type concrete?

Which of the following is a limitation of lightweight concrete compared to conventional concrete?

A. Increased permeability
B. Reduced density
C. Enhanced thermal property
D. Higher fire resistance
Correct Answer: A. Increased permeability

📚 Detailed Explanation: Increased Permeability is the Key Limitation of Lightweight Concrete

Why A (Increased permeability) is correct: Lightweight concrete achieves its low unit weight through porous lightweight aggregates (expanded clay, pumice, expanded shale) or deliberately introduced voids (aerated/foamed concrete). This inherent porosity creates continuous capillary pathways through which water, chlorides, CO2, and other aggressive agents can penetrate, making permeability the primary durability limitation versus conventional dense concrete.

Lightweight Concrete: Advantages vs. Limitation

Property vs. Conventional Concrete Advantage or Limitation?
A. Permeability Higher (more porous structure) LIMITATION — reduced durability; more chemical attack risk
B. Density Lower (300–2000 kg/m³ vs. 2400) Advantage — reduces dead load; enables longer spans
C. Thermal insulation Better (lower thermal conductivity) Advantage — reduces heating/cooling energy
D. Fire resistance Better (lower conductivity slows heat transmission) Advantage — slower temperature rise; less spalling
Compressive strength Generally lower Limitation — requires careful structural design

Types of Lightweight Concrete and Their Permeability

Type Density (kg/m³) Permeability Level Application
Aerated / Foamed (AAC) 300–800 Very high — porous foam structure Non-structural walls; insulation
No-fines concrete 1600–2000 High — deliberate void structure Drainage layers; walls
Lightweight aggregate (structural) 1400–2000 Moderate to high — porous aggregate Bridges; offshore; upper floors
  • Increased permeability is the primary limitation of lightweight concrete.
  • Higher porosity allows water, chlorides, and CO2 to penetrate more easily, reducing durability.
  • Reduced density, better thermal insulation, and better fire resistance are all advantages.

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