A DEM model for elastic sleepers to study dynamic railway track behaviour
Research output: Thesis › Master's Thesis
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2021.
Research output: Thesis › Master's Thesis
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TY - THES
T1 - A DEM model for elastic sleepers to study dynamic railway track behaviour
AU - Pircher, Paul
N1 - no embargo
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Differential settlement along ballasted railway tracks is one of the main factors that force maintenance work. The elasticity of the sleeper (the railroad tie) plays a key role in transferring the wheel-rail contact forces to the ground, and thus, impacts the long-term track settlement due to the occurring local pressure distribution. A deeper physical understanding of the interaction between the railway sleeper and the ballast can help to improve the railway infrastructure and thereby reduce maintenance activities significantly. Due to the discrete nature of railway ballast, the discrete element method (DEM) is considered a suitable and widely used numerical tool to gain insight into the physical phenomena at particle level and to simulate the bulk behaviour of ballast. In recent DEM related railway track research, the sleeper is either modelled as a rigid body, built up by bonded particles or implemented by a complex coupling method. Since sleeper elasticity significantly impacts the dynamic interaction of the sleeper with the ballast bed, efficient DEM simulations with accurate elastic sleeper models are needed. In this thesis a method is presented that uses the particle facet model (PFM) to design an elastically deformable sleeper. The PFM uses nodes, cylinders, and so-called PFacets to construct flexible objects and was initially utilised to model elastic roots, grids, and membranes with a smooth surface. This approach is adapted to replicate a smoothed surface elastic sleeper without the need for coupling techniques. This way, railway track simulations can be carried out that consider the effects of sleeper elasticity on the discrete railway ballast realistically. DEM simulations in a box-test setup were carried out in which the elastic PFM sleeper was placed on a compacted ballast bed and then cyclically loaded. The computed pressure distribution at the sleeper-ballast interface, the sleeper deflection profile and the settlement were in qualitative agreement with the literature. In contrast to rigid sleeper models and numerical tools that consider the ballast as a continuum, the simulations have shown that the aforementioned results heavily depend on the initial configuration of the ballast bed. The proposed modelling method offers an realistic integration of elastic sleepers into ballasted railway track DEM simulations and thereby improves the understanding of the physical effects resulting from the sleeper's elasticity. Numerical studies of complex railway track regions where the sleeper´s mechanical properties are decisive, as found in curves or turnouts, are thus made possible.
AB - Differential settlement along ballasted railway tracks is one of the main factors that force maintenance work. The elasticity of the sleeper (the railroad tie) plays a key role in transferring the wheel-rail contact forces to the ground, and thus, impacts the long-term track settlement due to the occurring local pressure distribution. A deeper physical understanding of the interaction between the railway sleeper and the ballast can help to improve the railway infrastructure and thereby reduce maintenance activities significantly. Due to the discrete nature of railway ballast, the discrete element method (DEM) is considered a suitable and widely used numerical tool to gain insight into the physical phenomena at particle level and to simulate the bulk behaviour of ballast. In recent DEM related railway track research, the sleeper is either modelled as a rigid body, built up by bonded particles or implemented by a complex coupling method. Since sleeper elasticity significantly impacts the dynamic interaction of the sleeper with the ballast bed, efficient DEM simulations with accurate elastic sleeper models are needed. In this thesis a method is presented that uses the particle facet model (PFM) to design an elastically deformable sleeper. The PFM uses nodes, cylinders, and so-called PFacets to construct flexible objects and was initially utilised to model elastic roots, grids, and membranes with a smooth surface. This approach is adapted to replicate a smoothed surface elastic sleeper without the need for coupling techniques. This way, railway track simulations can be carried out that consider the effects of sleeper elasticity on the discrete railway ballast realistically. DEM simulations in a box-test setup were carried out in which the elastic PFM sleeper was placed on a compacted ballast bed and then cyclically loaded. The computed pressure distribution at the sleeper-ballast interface, the sleeper deflection profile and the settlement were in qualitative agreement with the literature. In contrast to rigid sleeper models and numerical tools that consider the ballast as a continuum, the simulations have shown that the aforementioned results heavily depend on the initial configuration of the ballast bed. The proposed modelling method offers an realistic integration of elastic sleepers into ballasted railway track DEM simulations and thereby improves the understanding of the physical effects resulting from the sleeper's elasticity. Numerical studies of complex railway track regions where the sleeper´s mechanical properties are decisive, as found in curves or turnouts, are thus made possible.
KW - DEM
KW - Discrete element method
KW - Elastic sleeper
KW - Railway
KW - Settlement
KW - Ballast
KW - Pressure distribution
KW - PFM
KW - Particle facet model
KW - PFacet
KW - Deformable sleeper
KW - Flexible sleeper
KW - Smooth surface
KW - Box test
KW - Cyclic loading
KW - Yade
KW - Railhead
KW - DEM
KW - Diskrete Elemente Methode
KW - Elastische Schwelle
KW - Oberbau
KW - Bahnoberbau
KW - Gleisoberbau
KW - Setzung
KW - Fahrwegsetzung
KW - Elastische Bahnschwelle
KW - Elastizit�t
KW - Schienenoberbau
KW - Schwellenelastizit�t
KW - Particle Facet Modell
KW - PFM
KW - PFacet
KW - Verformbar
KW - Box Test
KW - Gleisschotter
KW - Schotteroberbau
KW - Schotter
KW - Glatte Oberfl�che
KW - Zyklische Belastung
KW - Yade
U2 - 10.34901/MUL.PUB.2021.5
DO - 10.34901/MUL.PUB.2021.5
M3 - Master's Thesis
ER -