A contribution for integrated analysis of railway track performance at transition zones and other discontinuities

2016 ◽  
Vol 111 ◽  
pp. 699-709 ◽  
Author(s):  
André Paixão ◽  
Eduardo Fortunato ◽  
Rui Calçada
Author(s):  
Erdem Balcı ◽  
Niyazi Özgür Bezgin ◽  
Mohamed Wehbi

Track stiffness is an important parameter that affects railway track response. Axle spacing influences the response of the track to wheel forces and has an effect on track stiffness. Track response to train wheels within a bogie or between neighboring bogies vary in relation to their mutual interference, depending on the mechanical characteristics of the layers composing the track, axle spacing and bogie spacing. This interference affects the force-deflection characteristic of the railway track under a wheel. Dynamic impact forces caused by track and wheel roughness relate to track stiffness. Therefore, everything else being the same, two trains with different bogie spacing may generate different dynamic impact forces on the railway track. As a result, the accumulated damage to a railway track over time can relate not only to cumulative tonnage but also to the axle spacing of the trains operating on the railway track. Through superposition of the estimated track deflections by the beam-on-elastic-foundation theorem and looking at it from a new perspective, this paper discovers a set of relations between the variations of track stiffness with bogie axle spacing. The paper introduces a new concept of apparent track stiffness and hypothesizes that dynamic impact forces on the railway tracks relate to axle spacing. The paper then presents a numerical study and an analytical study that analyzes wheel and track interaction along stiffness transition zones for different values of axle spacing and shows that bogie axle spacing has an effect on dynamic impact forces on railway tracks.


2020 ◽  
Vol 118 ◽  
pp. 104866
Author(s):  
Chayut Ngamkhanong ◽  
Quek Yan Ming ◽  
Ting Li ◽  
Sakdirat Kaewunruen

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
André Paixão ◽  
José Nuno Varandas ◽  
Eduardo Fortunato

Transition zones between embankments and bridges or tunnels are examples of critical assets of the railway infrastructure. These locations often exhibit higher degradations rates, mostly due to the development of differential settlements, which amplify the dynamic train-track interaction, thus further accelerating the development of settlements and deteriorating track components and vehicles. Despite the technical and scientific interest in predicting the long-term behavior of transition zones, few studies have been able to develop a robust approach that could accurately simulate this complex structural response. To address this topic, this work presents a three-dimensional finite element (3D FEM) approach to simulate the long-term behavior of railway tracks at transition zones. The approach considers both plastic deformation of the ballast layer using a high-cycle strain accumulation model and the non-linearity of the dynamic vehicle-track interaction that results from the evolution of the deformed states of the track itself. The results shed some light into the behavior of transition zones and evidence the complex long-term response of this structures and its interdependency with the transient response of the train-track interaction. Aspects that are critical when assessing the performance of these systems are analyzed in detail, which might be of relevance for researchers and practitioners in the design, construction, and maintenance processes.


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