Effect of Extreme Climate on Wheel-Rail Interaction over Rail Squats
6th European Conference on Computational Mechanics (ECCM 6), 7th European Conference on Computational Fluid Dynamics (ECFD 7) 2018
Sakdirat Kaewunruen, Andris Freimanis, Makoto Ishida

Globally, modern ballasted railway tracks have become the most efficient and effective type of infrastructure for railway industry operating below 250 km/h of train speed for over centuries. The ballasted tracks have been tailored and optimised over and over; and they are often used in light rail tracks, metro networks, suburban rail network and intercity rail lines since they are relatively inexpensive and quite superior in terms of maintainability and constructability. Rail squats are defined by the growth of any cracks that have grown longitudinally through the rail subsurface and some of the cracks propagating to the bottom of rails transversely have branched from initial longitudinal cracks with a depression of rail surface. The rail defects are commonly referred to as ‘squats’ when they were initiated from damage caused by rolling contact fatigue, and as ‘studs’ when they were associated with white etching layer caused by the transform from pearlitic steel due to friction heat generated by wheel sliding or excessive traction. Such rail surface defect induces wheel/rail impact and large amplitude vibration of track structure and poor ride quality. In Australia, Europe and Japan, rail squats/studs have occasionally turned into broken rails. The root cause and preventive solution to this defect are still under investigation from the fracture mechanical and material scientific point of view. The dynamic interactions between vehicle and track impose vibrations and acoustic radiations and become moving vibro-acoustic sources along the railway corridor. Especially when there is imperfection of either wheel or rail, the dynamic amplification of loading conditions and reflected vibration effects on infrastructure and rolling stocks is significantly higher. This study is the world first to evaluate the coupling dynamic 2 vehicle-track interactions over rail squat defects considering the effect of extreme temperatures. The vehicle model has adopted multi degrees of freedom coupling with a discrete supported track model using Herzian contact theory. This paper highlights the dynamic load redistribution experienced by railway track components due to wheel/rail contacts. The insight into the dynamic amplification and track load distribution will enable predictive track maintenance and risk-based track inspection planning to enhance public safety and reduce unplanned maintenance costs.


Keywords
Rail Squats, Extreme Climate, Track loading, Wheel-Rail, Dynamic Interaction
Hyperlink
http://www.eccm-ecfd2018.org/admin/files/filePaper/p344.pdf

Kaewunruen, S., Freimanis, A., Ishida, M. Effect of Extreme Climate on Wheel-Rail Interaction over Rail Squats. In: 6th European Conference on Computational Mechanics (ECCM 6), 7th European Conference on Computational Fluid Dynamics (ECFD 7), United Kingdom, Glasgow, 11-15 June, 2018. Glasgow: --, 2018, pp.1-11.

Publication language
English (en)
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