Investigation of the formation of corrugation-induced rail squats based on extensive field monitoring

Journal Article (2018)
Author(s)

X. Deng (TU Delft - Railway Engineering)

Zhiwei Qian (TU Delft - Railway Engineering)

Zili Li (TU Delft - Railway Engineering)

RPBJ Dollevoet (TU Delft - Railway Engineering)

Research Group
Railway Engineering
Copyright
© 2018 X. Deng, Zhiwei Qian, Z. Li, R.P.B.J. Dollevoet
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijfatigue.2018.03.002
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Copyright
© 2018 X. Deng, Zhiwei Qian, Z. Li, R.P.B.J. Dollevoet
Research Group
Railway Engineering
Volume number
112
Pages (from-to)
94-105
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Rail squats originate from a number of sources, such as corrugations, indentations and welds. A five-year continual field monitoring study was performed on squats induced by corrugations. This study indicated that a small black depression formed at the corrugation under wheel-rail dynamic forces, and then, a primary crack typically initiated on the gauge side edge of the depression. Subsequently, the crack began to propagate in the rail surface in a U shape toward the gauge side in both the traffic direction and the opposite-traffic direction and into the rail toward the field side at an angle of approximately 20°. Rail inclination could influence the crack initiation location and propagation path. The geometry of the black squat depression was initially elliptical, and then, its edge followed the U-shaped cracking path as it grew. The squats turned into a kidney-like shape, typically with a U-shaped crack. Tensile stress likely led to the squat crack initiation and propagation. This cracking phenomenon and mechanism are analogous to the ring/cone crack formation of brittle materials under sphere-sliding contact. As the squats grew further, a ridge formed in the middle part of the depression, and an I-shaped crack appeared at this ridge due to the impact of the wheels. This process eventually led to two-lung-shaped mature squats, typically with a Y-shaped crack. The findings of this paper provide insight into the formation of rail squats.

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