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NPTEL- Advanced Geotechnical Engineering

Module 4
PORE WATER PRESSURE AND SHEAR STRENGTH (Lectures 17 to 26)

Topics
1.1 MOHR-COULOMB FAILURE CRITERIA 1.2 SHEARING STRENGTH OF GRANULAR SOILS
1.2.1 Direct Shear Test 1.2.2 Triaxial Test 1.2.3 Axial compression tests 1.2.4 Axial extension tests 1.2.5 Critical Void Ratio 1.2.6 Curvature of the Failure Envelope
Effect of angularity of soil particles Effect of rate of loading during the test

1.2.7 Shear strength of Granular Soils under Plane Strain Condition

1.3 SHEAR STRENGTH OF COHESIVE SOILS


1.3.1 Triaxial Testing in Clays
Consolidated drained test Consolidated undrained test Unconsolidated undrained test

1.3.2 Unconfined Compression Test 1.3.3 Relation of Undrained Shear Strength and Effective Overburden Pressure 1.3.4 Effect of Rate of Strain on the Undrained Shear Strength 1.3.5 Effect of Temperature on Shear Strength of Clay 1.3.6 Relationship between Water Content and Strength 1.3.7 Unique Effective Stress Failure Envelope 1.3.8 Unique Relationship between Water Content and Effective Stress
Dept. of Civil Engg. Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur 1

NPTEL- Advanced Geotechnical Engineering

1.3.9 Vane Shear Test 1.3.10 Undrained Shear Strength of Anisotropic Clay 1.3.11 Applicability of Drained (, ) and Undrained ( ) Shear Strength arameters for Foundation Design 1.3.12 Hvorslevs Parameters 1.3.13 Creep in Soils

Dept. of Civil Engg. Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur

NPTEL- Advanced Geotechnical Engineering

Chapter 4 Lecture 17 Stresses in Soil Mass-1 Topics


The shear strength of soils is an important aspect in many geotechnical engineering engineering problems such as the bearing capacity of foundations, the stability of the slopes of dams and embankments, and lateral earth pressure on retaining walls.

1.1 MOHR-COULOMB FAILURE CRITERIA


In 1910, Mohr presented a theory for rupture in materials. The failure along a plane in a material occurs by a critical combination of normal and shear stresses, and not by normal or shear stress alone. The functional relation between normal and shear stress on the failure plane can be given by = () (1)

Where s is the shear stress at failure and is the normal stress on the failure plane. The failure envelope defined by equation (1) is shown in figure 1.

Figure 1 Mohr-Coulomb failure criteria In 1776, Coulomb defined the function () as = + tan Where c is cohesion and is the angle of friction of the soil.
Dept. of Civil Engg. Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur 3

(2)

NPTEL- Advanced Geotechnical Engineering

Equation (2) is generally referred to as the Mohr-Coulomb failure criteria. If the normal and shear stresses on a plane in a soil mass are such that they plot as point A, shear failure will not occur along that plane. Shear failure along a plane will occur if the stresses plot as point B, which falls on the failure envelope. A state of stress plotting as point C cannot exits, since this falls above the failure envelope; shear failure would have occurred before this condition was reached. In saturated soils, the stress carried by the soil solids is the effective stress and so equation (2) must be modified: = + tan = + Where u is the pore water pressure and is the effective stress on the plane. The term is also referred to as the drained friction angle. For sand, inorganic silts, and normally consolidated clays, 0. The value of c is greater than zero for overconsolidated clays. (3)

Dept. of Civil Engg. Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur

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