Reconstruction of an informative railway wheel defect signal from wheel–rail contact signals measured by multiple wayside sensors

Journal Article (2019)
Author(s)

A. Alemi (TU Delft - Transport Engineering and Logistics)

F. Corman (ETH Zürich)

Y. Pang (TU Delft - Transport Engineering and Logistics)

G. Lodewijks (University of New South Wales)

Research Group
Transport Engineering and Logistics
Copyright
© 2019 A. Alemi, F. Corman, Y. Pang, G. Lodewijks
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1177/0954409718784362
More Info
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Publication Year
2019
Language
English
Copyright
© 2019 A. Alemi, F. Corman, Y. Pang, G. Lodewijks
Research Group
Transport Engineering and Logistics
Issue number
1
Volume number
233
Pages (from-to)
49-62
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

Wheel impact load detectors are widespread railway systems used for measuring the wheel–rail contact force. They usually measure the rail strain and convert it to force in order to detect high impact forces and corresponding detrimental wheels. The measured strain signal can also be used to identify the defect type and its severity. The strain sensors have a limited effective zone that leads to partial observation from the wheels. Therefore, wheel impact load detectors exploit multiple sensors to collect samples from different portions of the wheels. The discrete measurement by multiple sensors provides the magnitude of the force; however, it does not provide the much richer variation pattern of the contact force signal. Therefore, this paper proposes a fusion method to associate the collected samples to their positions over the wheel circumferential coordinate. This process reconstructs an informative signal from the discrete samples collected by multiple sensors. To validate the proposed method, the multiple sensors have been simulated by an ad hoc multibody dynamic software (VI-Rail), and the outputs have been fed to the fusion model. The reconstructed signal represents the contact force and consequently the wheel defect. The obtained results demonstrate considerable similarity between the contact force and the reconstructed defect signal that can be used for further defect identification.