Oven-drying method – moisture content formula from container weights: A container weighs W1. The container with moist soil weighs W2. After oven drying, the container with dry soil weighs W3. What is the correct expression for water content w of the soil (decimal or % as desired)?
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Aw = (W2 − W3) / (W3 − W1)
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Bw = (W3 − W2) / (W2 − W1)
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Cw = (W2 − W1) / (W3 − W1)
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Dw = (W2 − W3) / (W2 − W1)
Answer
Correct Answer: w = (W2 − W3) / (W3 − W1)
Explanation
Introduction / Context:Accurate water content is foundational for phase relationships, compaction control, and strength predictions. The oven-drying method determines the mass of water removed relative to the mass of dry soil using simple weighings of a tared container before and after drying.
Given Data / Assumptions:
- W1 = mass of empty container.
- W2 = mass of container + moist soil.
- W3 = mass of container + dry soil after oven drying (105–110 °C).
- No loss of solids during drying; moisture fully removed.
Concept / Approach:Water content w is defined as Mw / Ms, where Mw is mass of water and Ms is mass of dry soil. Mw equals the difference between moist and dry masses; Ms equals dry mass excluding the container. Substituting measured quantities gives the standard laboratory expression.
Step-by-Step Solution:
Mw = (W2 − W3).Ms = (W3 − W1).Therefore, w = Mw / Ms = (W2 − W3) / (W3 − W1).If needed in percent, multiply by 100.Verification / Alternative check:Sanity check: if W2 ≈ W3 (very dry sample), numerator tends to zero and w tends to zero as expected.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
- Option B reverses signs producing negative or nonsensical values.
- Option C uses moist mass in denominator; definition requires dry mass.
- Option D divides by moist mass of soil plus container, not the dry mass of soil.
Common Pitfalls:Using percent in calculations without converting to decimal; spillage during drying; not cooling in a desiccator leading to buoyancy/evaporation errors.
Final Answer:w = (W2 − W3) / (W3 − W1)