For cold weather concreting, cement containing ________ should be selected.

As a precaution in cold weather concreting, cement containing ________ should be selected.

A. Lower C₃S and higher C₂S
B. Higher C₃S and lower C₂S
C. Lower C₃S and lower C₂S
D. Higher C₃S and higher C₂S
Correct Answer: B. Higher C₃S and lower C₂S

📚 Detailed Explanation: Cold Weather Requires Cement with High C₃S and Low C₂S

Why B (Higher C3S and lower C2S) is correct: In cold weather, the rate of cement hydration slows dramatically, leaving fresh concrete vulnerable to freezing before it gains adequate strength. To combat this, a cement with a higher proportion of Tricalcium Silicate (C3S) is selected because it hydrates rapidly, generates significant heat of hydration, and produces high early compressive strength. Dicalcium Silicate (C2S) is a slow hydration compound — more C2S means less early strength, which is precisely what you do NOT want in cold weather.

Cement Compound Hydration Properties

Compound Symbol Rate of Hydration Heat Generated Early Strength Long-term Strength
Tricalcium Silicate C3S (Alite) Rapid High (500 J/g) High Good
Dicalcium Silicate C2S (Belite) Very slow Low (260 J/g) Very low High
Tricalcium Aluminate C3A Very rapid Very high (865 J/g) Very early (flash set if uncontrolled) Susceptible to sulphate attack
Tetracalcium Aluminoferrite C4AF Moderate Moderate (420 J/g) Moderate Moderate

Why High C₃S is Critical for Cold Weather Concreting

Benefit of High C₃S How It Helps in Cold Weather
Rapid hydration Generates significant heat of hydration quickly; raises internal concrete temperature; counters ambient cold
High early strength Concrete reaches structural strength before temperatures can drop to freezing; reduces the vulnerable plastic stage duration
More heat per unit mass Self-heating effect reduces dependence on external heating measures

Cements Suitable for Cold Weather Concreting

Cement Type C₃S Content Suitability for Cold Weather
Rapid Hardening Portland Cement (RHPC) Very high (>60%) Excellent — designed for high early strength
Ordinary Portland Cement (OPC 53 grade) High (≈55–65%) Good — standard choice with adequate early strength
OPC 33 grade Moderate Acceptable with precautions
Sulphate-Resisting Cement (SRPC) Low C3A; moderate C3S Avoid in very cold — lower heat generation
Low Heat Cement Low C3S; high C2S ✗ NOT suitable — slow heat generation, slow early strength
  • Cold weather concreting requires cement with higher C3S and lower C2S.
  • High C3S = rapid hydration + high heat of hydration + high early strength — all critical before potential freezing.
  • Low Heat Cement (high C2S) should be avoided in cold weather; it is ideal for mass concrete where heat dissipation is needed.

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