The influence of track geometry irregularities on rolling contact fatigue
Paper in proceeding, 2012

Optimised maintenance of railway tracks requires knowledge of how a deteriorated track geometry will affect subsequent damage of the track. In this study the influence on rolling contact fatigue (RCF) is investigated through numerical simula- tions. The numerical simulations employ a vehicle model of a freight wagon run on tracks with a single track irregularity or with irregularities generated from a power spectral density. Evaluated RCF impact is correlated to the track geometry to identify intrinsic properties of track geometry and irregularities that promote surface initiated rolling contact fatigue. On tangent track simulations predict a single lateral irregularity with amplitude of 6 mm and wavelength less than 20 m to be sufficient to cause RCF. For curves with a radius of 1250 metres simulations employing generated lateral irregularities indicate that the most efficient RCF mitigation measure is to reduce the longwave content of the lateral irregularities.

Author

Kalle Karttunen

Dynamics

Elena Kabo

Chalmers, Applied Mechanics, Material and Computational Mechanics

Anders Ekberg

Dynamics

Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Contact Mechanics and Wear of Rail/Wheel Systems (CM2012)

540-546

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Innovation and entrepreneurship

Areas of Advance

Transport

Building Futures (2010-2018)

Materials Science

Subject Categories

Applied Mechanics

Infrastructure Engineering

Vehicle Engineering

More information

Created

10/7/2017