首页> 外文期刊>Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part J. Journal of engineering tribology >Influence of longitudinal creepage and wheel inertia on short-pitch corrugation: a resonance-free mechanism to explain the roaring rail phenomenon
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Influence of longitudinal creepage and wheel inertia on short-pitch corrugation: a resonance-free mechanism to explain the roaring rail phenomenon

机译:纵向蠕变和车轮惯性对短节距波纹的影响:解释共振轨道现象的无共振机制

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Short-pitch corrugation (30-80 mm in wavelength) in railways, despite being well known since the early days of the railways because of its criticality in producing damage, 'roaring rail' or 'howling wheel' noise, and indirectly rolling contact fatigue, is considered an enigmatic phenomenon. In fact, most available data seem to show a non-linearly increasing wavelength with speed, and an almost fixed wavelength, while most models based on system resonances predict a fixed frequency. More enigmatic still, many data points fall in a range of frequencies where there is no evident resonance in the wheel-railtrack system (the large gap between the low frequencies resonances from 50 to 300 Hz and the very high pinned-pinned mode resonant frequencies which correspond generally to 850-1100 Hz in railways. Yet the most common classifications of corrugation continue to associate corrugation to frequency-fixing mechanisms. Johnson's early studies on the Hertz normal spring resonance suggest that plasticity-based repeats impact mechanism, of differential wear mechanism both seemed to be not appropriate to explain short-pitch corrugation. In particular, longitudinal creepage (obviously associated with braking or acceleration very common on uphill grades, near stations, but also in curves where profiles provide insufficient steering capability) seemed to act to suppress corrugation, rather than promoting it, as suggested in the model of Grassie and Johnson. Only a few, very comprehensive models that include all the relevant receptances consider the effect of wheel inertia: indeed, these models indicate many possible corrugation regimes and, in particular, point at lateral creepage mechanisms at the pinned-pinned resonant frequency as giving much larger growth than longitudinal creepage, so the possibility of a corrugation regime independent of wheelset or railtrack resonances has largely remained hidden, despite it being present in some results. In this paper, a simple model that returns to a pure longitudinal creepage mechanism is suggested, showing that it is essential to include the rotational dynamics of the wheel in the system, similar to Grassie and Johnson's model. In particular, a simple full-stick Winkler-contact mechanics model can estimate the effect of transient contact mechanics. For typical inertias, the conditions are closer to the constant tangential load (which is the correct limit at zero speed anyway) and seem to explain the basic features of wear-induced instability in the existing experimental data. For larger inertias, which may also be possible for heavy wheelsets, the model predicts results closer to Grassie and Johnson's assumption of constant creepage, i.e. only a limited range of possible short-pitch corrugation. The model also suggests that although the growth of corrugation depends strongly on the amplification of the normal load, the wavelength of this mode of corrugation depends very little on the vertical resonances of the systems, so that it would persist even in a model with no resonance altogether. It is possible that the exact frequency of this regime depends on the details of the contact geometry, here simplified using the Winkler model. Finally, a reason why this mechanism of longitudinal creepage corrugation, despite perhaps giving 10-20 times apparently lower growth than lateral creepage, may indeed be the correct mechanism to interpret the classical data, is that longitudinal creepage can be 10 times higher than lateral (5 per cent instead of 0.5 per cent), and as corrugation growth is proportional to square of creepage, there is a factor 100 that largely compensates for this. There is still some progress to be made to obtain a reliable model to compare the various regimes, but clearly this regime should be considered when devising remedies to corrugation.
机译:铁路中的短节距波纹(波长为30-80毫米),尽管自铁路初期起就广为人知,因为它在产生损坏,“咆哮”或“啸叫”声以及间接滚动接触疲劳方面具有关键意义,被认为是一种神秘现象。实际上,大多数可用数据似乎显示出波长随速度非线性增加,并且波长几乎固定,而大多数基于系统共振的模型则预测固定频率。更令人费解的是,许多数据点都落在轮轨系统中没有明显共振的频率范围内(低频共振从50到300 Hz之间有很大的差距,而很高的销钉-销钉模式共振频率则介于通常在铁路中对应于850-1100 Hz,但最常见的波纹分类仍将波纹与固定频率相关联。约翰逊对赫兹正常弹簧共振的早期研究表明,基于塑性的重复冲击机制,差速磨损机制都似乎不适合解释短节距的波纹,特别是纵向爬坡(显然与制动或加速有关,在上坡路段,车站附近,以及在曲线无法提供足够转向能力的弯道中很常见)似乎起到了抑制波纹的作用。 ,而不是像Grassie和Johnson的模型所建议的那样推广它。包含所有相关接受因素的综合模型考虑了车轮惯性的影响:确实,这些模型表明了许多可能的波纹状态,尤其是在固定共振频率下,侧向蠕变机制指向比纵向蠕变更大的增长,因此,尽管出现了一些结果,但仍无法发现独立于轮对或铁轨共振的波纹状态的可能性。在本文中,提出了一个返回纯纵向爬电机制的简单模型,该模型表明,必须将车轮的旋转动力学纳入系统,这与Grassie和Johnson的模型相似。特别是,一个简单的全杆温克勒接触力学模型可以估算瞬态接触力学的影响。对于典型的惯性,条件更接近恒定的切向载荷(无论如何,这是零速时的正确极限),并且似乎可以在现有实验数据中解释磨损引起的不稳定性的基本特征。对于较大的惯性,这对于重型轮对也是可能的,该模型预测的结果更接近于格拉西和约翰逊关于恒定爬电距离的假设,即仅在可能的短节距波纹范围内。该模型还表明,尽管波纹的增长在很大程度上取决于法向载荷的放大率,但这种波纹模式的波长很少取决于系统的垂直谐振,因此即使在没有谐振的模型中,波纹也将持续存在共。这种状态的确切频率可能取决于接触几何的细节,此处使用Winkler模型进行了简化。最后,尽管纵向爬电波纹的生长速度可能比横向爬电增长低10-20倍,但实际上可能是解释经典数据的正确机制的原因是纵向爬电波纹可以比横向爬电高10倍( 5%,而不是0.5%),并且瓦楞纸的增长与爬电率的平方成正比,因此有一个系数100可以对此做出较大补偿。要获得一个可靠的模型来比较各种不同的方案,仍然有一些进展,但是显然在设计瓦楞纸的补救措施时应考虑使用这种方案。

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