Let $G$ be a graph. A **$k$-spread** is a set of cliques of order $k$ which partition the vertex set (so $k|n$, where $n$ is the number of vertices). A **partial $k$-resolution** of $G$ is a set of pairwise disjoint $k$-spreads of $G$. Let us define the $k$-spread number $s_{k}(G)$ to be the maximum cardinality of a partial $k$-resolution of $G$. > Are there known facts about $s_{k}(G)$? **Motivation and more specific question** The definitions above are motivated by the concept of a spread in a strongly regular graph, introduced by Haemers & Tonchev in their [1996 paper][1]. Their notion of a spread is a bit more special, in that they require the cliques to be Delsarte cliques (*i.e.* of the maximum allowed cardinality under the Delsarte/Hoffman spectral bound). In particular, they show that the McLaughlin graph $McL$ (the unique $(275,112,30,56)$ strongly regular graph) has a spread in their sense. The Delsarte bound of $McL$ is $5$ so in my notation $s_{5}(McL) \geq 1$. > Is $s_{5}(McL)=7$? [1]: https://pure.uvt.nl/portal/files/163971/spreads_.pdf