Ballast and Sleeper Fundamentals Track21 Workshop, June 2014
Transcription
Ballast and Sleeper Fundamentals Track21 Workshop, June 2014
Ballasted Track Enhancements: some outcomes of the Track21 Programme Antonis Zervos, William Powrie Louis Le Pen, John Harkness, Taufan Abadi, Femi Ajayi, Edgar Ferro What is Track21 • Programme Grant funded by EPSRC • £3.1M, 2010-2015 • Universities of Southampton (lead), Birmingham and Nottingham • Aim: to develop new understandings and insights into track system and civil engineering infrastructure behaviour Areas covered • • • • • • What lies beneath Ballast and sleepers Track system performance Noise and vibration Critical zones Economic and environmental performance Ballast and sleepers Objectives 1. Understand the role / requirements of ballast grading 2. Investigate “soft” techniques. Geogrids and random fibre reinforcement 3. Investigate different sleeper types and sleeper/ballast interface modifications such as under-sleeper pads Ballast grading: the effect of finer material NR: 1639kg/m3 3a: 1703kg/m3 4: 1648kg/m3 Full scale laboratory tests Southampton Railway Testing Facility Load: 5 to 98.1kN Frequency: 3Hz Cycles ≥ 3M Settlement vs no. of cycles: effect of ballast gradation D50 = 27mm D50 = 38-33mm Mixing in finer material, or even placing finer particles (D50 = 16mm) on top, gives a more stable ballast layer. Even better: re-profiling the shoulder to 1V:2H slope Settlement vs no. of cycles: effect of ballast gradation 1V:2H shoulder Two-layer Mixing in finer material, or even placing finer particles (D50 = 16mm) on top, gives a more stable ballast layer. Even better: re-profiling the shoulder to 1V:2H slope Resilient stiffness vs no. of cycles 1V:2H shoulder D50 = 27mm D50 = 34mm D50 = 38mm Permanent settlement vs resilient stiffness Sleeper-ballast contact analysis Schematic graphic of Sleeper type G44, base area 2.5 m by 0.285 m 200 mm 250 mm Pressure sensitive paper shows contact history at selected locations below sleeper after 2.5M load cycles Baseline test Increasing finer proportion Visualising ballast particle movement Start 0.25M cycles End Shoulder slope 1V:1H Shoulder slope 1V:2H Subtraction of contrast: identical photos give a black image. Level of of gray/white shading corresponds to the magnitude of particle movement. Fundamentals: Ballast and sleepers Objectives 1. Understand the role / requirements of ballast grading 2. Investigate “soft” techniques. Geogrids and random fibre reinforcement 3. Investigate different sleeper types and sleeper/ballast interface modifications such as under-sleeper pads Why fibre reinforcement? Seems to work in sands. Fibre reinforced LB sand, D50 = 1.8 mm Fibre reinforced ballast, D50 = 42 mm Possible advantages Understanding required • Mechanical strength improvement • Reduced deformation • Influence of fibres on packing of larger aggregates • Could be tamped if need be • Scaling relationships Materials 1/5 SB D50 ≈ 8mm 1/3 SB D50 ≈ 14mm Full-scale ballast D50 ≈ 40mm Polyethylene fibres Effect of fibres on density We quantify the amount of fibres using the 𝑉𝑓 volumetric fibre ratio, 𝑉𝑓𝑟 = 𝑉𝑠 Fibres disrupt packing: max. and min. densities reduce with Vfr Even maintaining the same bulk density, the introduction of fibres (i.e. increasing Vfr) results to a material of higher relative density. Effect of fibres on mechanical properties • 150 mm dia. • 300 mm height • Confining stress = 30 kPa • Monotonic loading • ~ emin (at constant relative density) Parameters • Vfr • 𝐿𝑁 = 𝐿𝑓 𝐷50 • 𝑊𝑁 = ; Lf = 100mm 𝑊𝑓 𝐷50 ; Wf = 35mm Effect of fibre length for fibre content Vfr = 1.6%, 1/3rd scale ballast Effect of fibre width for fibre content Vfr = 1.6%, 1/3rd scale ballast • LN and WN both influence mobilised strength. • At large strains, the influence of LN on the mobilised strength is more prominent than WN Scaling laws D50 = 8mm & 14mm D50 ~ 42mm Do materials with the same Vfr behave the same regardless of D50? Particle volume scales with (size)3 Fibre volume for constant fibre thickness scales with (size)2 As D50 increases, maintaining constant Vfr leads to more fibres present for the same number of particles: different material! A measure other than Vfr is needed. Scaling laws D50 = 8mm & 14mm D50 ~ 42mm ≈ Particle, D50 𝑁𝑓𝑝 Sphere, D50 𝑁𝑓 = 𝑁𝑝 Fibre number Avg. no. of particles, Np Fibres, Nf Materials with the same Nfp behave the same regardless of D50 Full scale tests LN = 7.5 WN = 2.5 Nfp = 1.33 (Vfr ≈ 0.6%) Fibre reinforced ballast 24 The effect of fibres on settlement Ncycles = 3 million Fibre reinforced ballast Unreinforced ballast Ncycles ≈ 2 million The effect of fibres on longitudinal pressure Longitudinal pressure, P Fundamentals: Ballast and sleepers Objectives 1. Understand the role / requirements of ballast grading 2. Investigate “soft” techniques. Geogrids and random fibre reinforcement 3. Investigate different sleeper types and sleeper/ballast interface modifications such as under-sleeper pads Effect of USP on long-term settlement Technical ID Thickness Weight Stiffness (CStat) Core material Type of USPs in the LAB tests (made by Tiflex) USP1 - Hard USP2 - Soft FC500 FC208GF 4 mm 9 mm 2 6 kg/m 5.6 kg/m2 0.228-0.311 0.079-0.105 N/mm3 N/mm3 Trackelast Bonded cork FC500 Lower settlement. Lower rate of settlement at large numbers of cycles. Effect of USP on sleeper-ballast contacts Baseline test Hard USP Mono-block Soft USP Approximated Particle Size Distribution Visual idealisation (square packing) D90 D10 2 3 Simplified equation: Number of contacts= Asleeper N. D2A . 2 1 3 DA 3 + 2 1 +… 3 DB 3 1 3 DN 2 3 1 3 DA : Results evaluated as a contact efficiency: Sleeper type Mono- block Test Baseline + USP 1 + USP 2 Measured contacts 147 314 447 Potential contacts calculated for 5 steps 513 513 513 Contact Efficiency (%) 28.0% 61.2% 87.1% Abadi, T. C., Le Pen, L. M., Zervos, A. & Powrie, W. (Submitted Spring 2014). Measuring the Contact Area and Pressure Between the Ballast and the Sleeper. The International Journal of Railway Technology. SaxeCoburg Publications Next steps www.t2f.org.uk Track to the Future • New programme grant, £5M plus industry / university contributions of £3.5M • Takes forward promising ideas from T21 and asks some new questions • Huddersfield as a new partner • Increased emphasis on ground-track-vehiclepassenger interaction Track to the Future • Three research challenges: • Track4Life – New track forms and components – Stiffness, settlement and standard deviation – Extending ballast life and facilitating re-use • Designer crossings and transitions • Noise-less track Track to the Future • Track4Life – New track forms and components • to develop, and demonstrate the effectiveness of, new track forms or components and promising interventions identified in Track21 e.g. under-sleeper pads and random fibre ballast reinforcement – Stiffness, settlement and standard deviation – Extending ballast life and facilitating re-use Track to the Future • Track4Life – New track forms and components – Stiffness, settlement and standard deviation • to develop an understanding of the relationships between track stiffness and track settlement, and geometrical standard deviation, taking into account the interactions with rail geometry and vehicle dynamics – Extending ballast life and facilitating re-use Track to the Future • Track4Life – New track forms and components – Stiffness, settlement and standard deviation – Extending ballast life and facilitating re-use • to extend ballast life by reducing or eliminating the factors leading to its degradation, assessing the feasibility of design for the degraded state & facilitating re-use rather than downcycling or disposal Southampton Boldrewood Innovation Campus National Infrastructure Laboratory £35M, of which £28M from UKCRIC* *UK 40 Collaboratorium for Research in Infrastructure and Cities Acknowledgements Industry Steering Group • Network Rail • HS2 • London Underground • Tata Steel • Pandrol • Balfour Beatty Rail • Aecom • RSSB • Rail Industry Association • ATOC • Transport Research Laboratory University of Nottingham • Glenn McDowell • Jean-Francois Ferellec • Sydney Laryea • Mohamed Safari EPSRC Thank you Any questions?