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AuthorNtotsios, Evangelos
AuthorThompson, David
AuthorHussein, Mohammed
Available date2020-12-02T07:03:52Z
Publication Date2017
Publication NameJournal of Sound and Vibration
ResourceScopus
ISSN0022460X
URIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsv.2017.05.006
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/17165
AbstractIn predictions of ground-borne vibration from railways, it is generally assumed that the unevenness profile of the wheel and rail is fully correlated between the two rails and the two wheels of an axle. This leads to identical contact forces at the two rails and can allow further simplifications of the vehicle model, the track model and the track/ground interface conditions. In the present paper, the level of correlation of the track loading at the wheel/rail interface due to rail unevenness and its influence on predictions of ground vibration is investigated. The extent to which the unevenness of the two rails is correlated has been estimated from measurements of track geometry obtained with track recording vehicles for four different tracks. It was found that for wavelengths longer than about 3 m the unevenness of the two rails can be considered to be strongly correlated and in phase. To investigate the effect of this on ground vibration, an existing model expressed in the wavenumber-frequency domain is extended to include separate inputs on the two rails. The track is modelled as an infinite invariant linear structure resting on an elastic stratified half-space. This is excited by the gravitational loading of a passing train and the irregularity of the contact surfaces between the wheels and the rails. The railway model is developed in this work to be versatile so that it can account or discard the effect of load correlations on the two rails beside the effects of variation of the tractions across the width of the track-ground interface and the vehicle sprung mass, as well as the roll motion of the sleepers and the axle. A comparative analysis is carried out on the influence of these factors on the response predictions using numerical simulations. It is shown that, when determining the vibration in the free field, it is important to include in the model the traction variation across the track-ground interface and the non-symmetrical loading at the two rails that occurs for unevenness wavelengths shorter than about 3 m.
SponsorThis work is undertaken as part of the MOTIV (Modelling of Train Induced Vibration) project which is funded by the EPSRC under EP/K006002/1 and EP/K005847/1. All data published in this paper are openly available from the University of Southampton repository at http://dx.doi.org/10.5258/SOTON/D0077.
Languageen
PublisherAcademic Press
SubjectGround-borne vibration
Track unevenness correlation
Wavenumber-frequency domain model
TitleThe effect of track load correlation on ground-borne vibration from railways
TypeArticle
Pagination142-163
Volume Number402


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