Dynamic vehicle–track interaction and loading in a railway crossing panel–calibration of a structural track model to comprehensive field measurements
Journal article, 2024

This paper presents a finite element model of a railway crossing panel for use in multibody simulations (MBS). It is a two-layer track model with rails and sleepers represented by beam elements that use linear bushings for rail fastenings and non-linear bushings for ballast. The model is calibrated and validated to measurement data from a comprehensively instrumented switch and crossing demonstrator installed in the Austrian railway network as a part of the European research programme Shift2Rail. The validation concerns the capability of the model to capture the structural response of the crossing panel under traffic loading after calibration of physical track parameters to realistic values. The structural response is measured in the form of displacements, strains, and sleeper-ballast contact forces. It is shown that the developed model can represent the measured track responses well and that it was necessary to account for a varying sleeper-ballast gap distribution along the crossing transition sleeper to obtain good agreement. The calibration uses Latin hypercube samples to explore the parameter space in a sensitivity analysis before a parameter optimisation is performed using a gradient-based method on a response surface built from a polyharmonic spline.

dynamic vehicle–track interaction

response surface

Switches and crossings

turnout

measurements

calibration

Author

Björn Pålsson

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Dynamics

Henrik Vilhelmson

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Dynamics

Uwe Ossberger

voestalpine Railway Systems GmbH

Michael Sehner

Corporate Development

Marko Milosevic

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Dynamics

Harald Loy

Corporate Development

University of Innsbruck

Jens Nielsen

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Dynamics

Vehicle System Dynamics

0042-3114 (ISSN) 1744-5159 (eISSN)

Vol. In Press

Subject Categories

Applied Mechanics

Transport Systems and Logistics

Infrastructure Engineering

Vehicle Engineering

DOI

10.1080/00423114.2024.2305289

More information

Latest update

2/9/2024 3