Ordinary Portland Cement (OPC) is routinely evaluated through compressive strength tests at 3, 7, and 28 days in accordance with IS 4031. In practical quality control, high early-age strength is often interpreted as an indicator of satisfactory long-term performance. This paper presents a diagnostic case study of an OPC 53 cement sample that exhibited unusually high 3-day strength (~46 MPa) and moderate 7-day strength (~49.5 MPa) but failed to achieve the specified 28-day requirement of 53 MPa. Routine chemical and physical test results indicated comparatively high alkali and alumina contents along with relatively quick setting characteristics. Without employing advanced microstructural characterization techniques, the study demonstrates how standard laboratory data can be interpreted to explain non-proportional strength development. Derived indicators such as strength progression ratios and statistical variability analysis were used to evaluate compliance robustness. The findings highlight the limitations of relying solely on early-age strength as a quality indicator and reinforce the necessity of 28-day verification in grade conformity assessment.
Rameez Ali Khan (Sun,) studied this question.