• Skip to main content

Geomechanics/Geotechnical Research Group

Texas A&M University College of Engineering
  • Home
  • News
  • Research
  • Conferences
  • People
You are here: Home / Research / Testing Facilities and Equipments / Consolidation and Swell Testing Systems / Direct Shear Test

Direct Shear Test

Description

The direct shear (DS) (ASTM D3080/ D3080M) test is a popular test to determine the shear strength parameters (cohesion, c and internal friction angle, ϕ) because it is simple, easy to perform, and inexpensive. This test is useful when a soil mass is likely to fail along a thin zone under plane strain conditions. The sample container for a DS test is a horizontally split, open metal box, called a shear box. Soil is placed in the box and one-half of the box is moved relative to the other half in the horizontal direction. Failure is thereby constrained along a thin zone of soil on the horizontal plane.

The DigiShear™ Automated Direct Shear Testing System is a computer controlled direct shear device that automates DS testing. It is a complete system incorporating GeoJacs (automated load actuators) for both vertical and horizontal loadings, four channels of 22-bit data acquisition, and all necessary sensors. Testing can be performed under closed loop control of deformation, load, or pressure. Specimens can be loaded and sheared in a variety of modes, including constant rate of deformation, constant rate of loading, or application of a series of step loads. . The DigiShear™ system automates the consolidation as well as the shearing portion of the test. Also, horizontal loading can be cycled during shear to determine residual strength.

Testing Ranges

  • Load capacity
    • Vertical: 2000 pounds
    • Horizontal: 2000 pounds
  • Speed: 0.000002 to 0.2 in/min
  • Horizontal Travel: ± 0.5 in
  • Specimen Rings: 2.5 in diameter

Material Properties

The determination of the cohesion, (c) and internal friction angle, (ϕ) is commonly accomplished by the direct shear test. The Mohr-Coulomb failure envelope (s) is a straight line, as defined by Coulomb (1776) and is represented by the equation s= c+ σ tan ϕ.

 

  • Figure 2a-Direct Shear Equipment
  • Figure 2b-Direct Shear Equipment
  • Figure 3-Direct Shear Equipment
  • ShearValueTable

Field Applications

  • Design of footing, embankments and foundations
  • Analysis and design of slopes
  • Design of MSE retaining walls
  • Analysis of soil-geosynthetic interactions
  • Evaluation the engineering properties of gas hydrate-bearing sediments

Publications

  • Puppala, Anand J., Pinit Ruttanaporamakul, Tejo V. Bheemasetti, and Ali Shafikhani. “Laboratory and field investigations on geofoam.” Journal of Pipeline Systems Engineering and Practice 10, no. 1 (2019): 04018036.
  • Nguyen, H. M., B. H. Fellenius, A. J. Puppala, O. C. Nguyen, and T. V. Bheemasetti. “Results of static loading tests on single piles and on pile-supported LPG Tanks.” Geotechnical and Geological Engineering 36, no. 6 (2018): 3811-3822.
  • Acharya, Raju, Aravind Pedarla, Tejo V. Bheemasetti, and Anand J. Puppala. “Assessment of guar gum biopolymer treatment toward mitigation of desiccation cracking on slopes built with expansive soils.” Transportation Research Record2657, no. 1 (2017): 78-88.
  • Puppala, Anand J., Sireesh Saride, Raja V. Yenigalla, Bhaskar CS Chittoori, and Ekarut Archeewa. “Long-term performance of a highway embankment built with lightweight aggregates.” Journal of Performance of Constructed Facilities 31, no. 5 (2017): 04017042.
  • Cai, Guojun, Songyu Liu, and Anand J. Puppala. “Evaluation of geotechnical parameters of a lagoonal clay deposit in Jiangsu Lixia River area of China by seismic piezocone tests.” KSCE Journal of Civil Engineering 20, no. 5 (2016): 1769-1782.
  • Vipulanandan, Cumaraswamy, Anand J. Puppala, M. Jao, M. S. Kim, H. Vasudevan, P. Kumar, and Y. L. Mo. Correlation of Texas Cone Penetrometer test values and shear strength of Texas soils: technical report. No. FHWA/TX-08/0-4862-1. 2008

© 2016–2025 Geomechanics/Geotechnical Research Group Log in

Texas A&M Engineering Experiment Station Logo
  • College of Engineering
  • Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering
  • Prospective Collaboration
  • State of Texas
  • Open Records
  • Risk, Fraud & Misconduct Hotline
  • Statewide Search
  • Site Links & Policies
  • Accommodations
  • Environmental Health, Safety & Security
  • Employment