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Rolling contact fatigue prediction using locomotive digital twin and a wheel-rail experimental program

conference contribution
posted on 2023-10-30, 05:49 authored by Esteban Bernal ArangoEsteban Bernal Arango, Maksym SpiryaginMaksym Spiryagin, Colin ColeColin Cole
Rolling contact fatigue (RCF) is the dominant degradation mode of wheels and rails in the railway sector. Furthermore, repairing activities on rails and wheels constitute the most expensive component of maintaining rolling stock and track infrastructure. RCF prediction is a complex task because it depends on several parameters that include vehicle speed, traction system characteristics, wheel-rail material properties, track layout, wheel-rail profiles, etc. Experimental approaches can only identify wheel-rail RCF after it has occurred, as wheel-rail forces and contact patch measuring technologies are still emerging and field experiments are only viable for a limited combination of vehicle-track operating parameters. This paper proposes a hybrid method that uses an experimental program to measure the actual wheel-rail material properties, field friction measurements and a numerical program performed through vehicle-track multi-body dynamic simulations, to produce more accurate predictions on RCF formation. First, tensile tests were performed on samples extracted from actual wheel-rail pieces. The dynamic friction-creep curve parameters were then measured at different track locations using a hand-held tribometer. The friction-creep parameters and material mechanical properties were used as inputs to the wheel-rail coupling of the AC locomotive multibody model. The latter also included a full traction control system model implemented through a co-simulation technique to produce a digital twin of an actual locomotive. A set of simulations were conducted on CQUniversity’s High Performance Computing Cluster. The results were postprocessed and presented as stress occurrence heatmaps overlayed on a material shakedown map which permits visualising the combination of operative parameters that promote RCF damage. The proposed method allows unprecedented insights on the root-cause of RCF formation and increased precision using the actual material mechanical properties and the locomotive digital twin. This innovative tool enables railway operators to predict wheel-rail health and maintenance regimes, reducing the overall cost of operating railways.

History

Start Page

89

End Page

99

Number of Pages

11

Start Date

2021-12-01

Finish Date

2021-12-03

ISBN-13

9781925627596

Location

Virtual

Publisher

Engineers Australia

Place of Publication

Online

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Author Research Institute

  • Centre for Railway Engineering

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Name of Conference

10th Australasian Congress on Applied Mechanics

Parent Title

ACAM10: 10th Australasian Congress on Applied Mechanics

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