Experimental Characterization of Wheel-Rail Contact Patch Evolution

Author:

Marshall M. B.1,Lewis R.1,Dwyer-Joyce R. S.1,Olofsson U.2,Björklund S.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Sheffield, Mappin Street, S1 3JD, UK

2. Department of Machine Design, KTH, SE 100 44 Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract

The contact area and pressure distribution in a wheel/rail contact is essential information required in any fatigue or wear calculations to determine design life, re-grinding, and maintenance schedules. As wheel or rail wear or surface damage takes place the contact patch size and shape will change. This leads to a redistribution of the contact stresses. The aim of this work was to use ultrasound to nondestructively quantify the stress distribution in new, worn, and damaged wheel-rail contacts. The response of a wheel/rail interface to an ultrasonic wave can be modeled as a spring. If the contact pressure is high the interface is very stiff, with few air gaps, and allows the transmission of an ultrasonic sound wave. If the pressure is low, interfacial stiffness is lower and almost all the ultrasound is reflected. A quasistatic spring model was used to determine maps of contact stiffness from wheel/rail ultrasonic reflection data. Pressure was then determined using a parallel calibration experiment. Three different contacts were investigated; those resulting from unused, worn, and sand damaged wheel and rail specimens. Measured contact pressure distributions are compared to those determined using elastic analytical and numerical elastic-plastic solutions. Unused as-machined contact surfaces had similar contact areas to predicted elastic Hertzian solutions. However, within the contact patch, the numerical models better reproduced the stress distribution, as they incorporated real surface roughness effects. The worn surfaces were smoother and more conformal, resulting in a larger contact patch and lower contact stress. Sand damaged surfaces were extremely rough and resulted in highly fragmented contact regions and high local contact stress.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Surfaces, Coatings and Films,Surfaces and Interfaces,Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials

Reference22 articles.

1. Wear at the Wheel/Rail Interface When Sanding is Used to Increase Adhesion;Lewis;Proc. Inst. Mech. Eng., F J. Rail Rapid Transit

2. Contact Mechanics Analysis of Measured Wheel-Rail Profiles using the Finite Element Method;Telliskivi;Proc. Inst. Mech. Eng., F J. Rail Rapid Transit

3. Applicability of the Hertz Contact Theory to Rail-Wheel Contact Problems;Yan;Arch. Appl. Mech.

4. Analysis Of Contact Pressure Using Ultrasonic Reflection;Dwyer-Joyce

5. Ultrasonic Measurement of Nominal Contact Area and Contact Pressure in a Wheel/Rail System;Pau;Proc. Inst. Mech. Eng., F J. Rail Rapid Transit

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