Structural Optimization of Composite Railway Sleepers
Structural Optimization of Composite Railway Sleepers
Structural Optimization of Composite Railway Sleepers
Abstract
Rail transport is the movement of passengers
and goods using wheeled vehicles, made to run on railway
tracks. Railways provide an energy-efficient way to
transport material over land. The railway tracks are a large
part of the system and provide smooth and hard surfaces on
which the wheels of the train roll with a little friction. Also,
the track spreads the weight of the train which means larger
amounts can be carried than trucks and roads. For some
railway infrastructure components, such as rails, alternative
materials are limited. However, for components such as
railway sleepers, there are number of alternative materials
available. Recent trend has been to exploit advanced fibre
composite material for railway sleepers. Although early
works in fibre composite development was largely in the
aircraft industries, its outstanding characteristics of strength
and durability makes it attractive for civil engineering
applications such as bridge, beam reinforcement, railway
sleeper and structural slab. This project is mainly to analyse
and compare the classical sleepers and composite sleepers.
These sleepers are structurally optimised in various shapes
using ANSYS software. From the comparison of obtained
results the best sleeper is recommended for railway track.
Keywords: Prestressed
polyurethane
I.
concrete,
Glass
fibre
reinforced
INTRODUCTION
seen in the case of rail sections not only there has been
movements of the forces which are acting in the longitudinal
direction but there are other forces which are acting in the
lateral direction too and all those forces which are acting
either of the direction are going to be transported finally to
the sleepers. If the amount of these forces is quite large then
the sleepers will come out of their position and will be
moving either along with the rail sections or they will just
loose this strength which they are going to impart to the
overall track structure. So this aspect of stability both
directional stability should be maintained
As world timber resources dwindle, timber sleepers
must be replaced by those of an alternative material. The
alternative material should have at least the same properties
as timber and be competitively priced. Steel and concrete
sleepers have been extensively used in several railway
tracks. Steel sleepers were found to be difficult to maintain,
noisy and required special fastenings for electrical
insulation. Concrete sleepers were heavy, relatively brittle,
and stiff. Subsequently prestressed concrete was introduced
and has been a popular material for sleepers although
manufacturing cost is high. However, some of the railway
tracks were built hundreds of years ago and track
components such as rails and sleepers need to be replaced or
require extensive maintenance. In order to overcome these
disadvantages composite materials are used for the
manufacturing of sleepers. To improve the lateral resistance
of sleepers the shape of the sleeper is modified as Y and
V. These shapes will be created using ANSYS and the
properties of composite material chosen, will be applied and
analysis will be undertaken. ANSYS is an analysis software
which is extensively used in structural engineering
applications.
Allan Manalo and ThiruAravinthan
(2012)[1] presented the investigation onto the mechanical
behavior of sleepers made from glue-laminated fibre
composite sandwich beams and evaluation against the
performance requirements for a railway turnout application.
The results show that the orientation of sandwich
laminations has a significant effect on the behaviour of
railway sleepers made from glue-laminated fibre composite
sandwich beams. Composite sleepers with edgewise
sandwich laminations showed the most efficient section
among the investigated beam configurations. Gluelaminated fibre composite sandwich beam has strength and
stiffness suitable for railway turnout sleeper application. The
new composite turnout sleeper has better mechanical
properties than most of the commercially available
composite sleepers.
Czesl aw Bajer and Roman Bogacz
(2013)[2]presented the dynamic analysis of Y-type track
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SakdiratKaewunruen
and
Alexander
Remennikov (2006)[6]demonstrates the finite element
modeling to investigate the static behaviors of railway
prestressed concrete sleeper, with the uses of nonlinear
material properties. Commercial package, ANSYS10, was
employed in this study, for which it would be benefit for the
industry. The finite element model of the prestressed
concrete sleeper was developed. The concrete bricks and
prestressing wires were modeled using SOLID65 and
LINK8 elements, respectively. The prestressing was applied
using the initial strain to LINK8 elements in the discrete
manner. Applied displacement method was used in the
analyses due to the fast and smooth convergence of
numerical iterations. The hogging moment test of railway
concrete sleeper was carried out, to evaluate its performance
under such loading. It was found that only known
compressive strength of concrete, measured from exacted
cores, and existing formulae are sufficient to model the
prestressed concrete sleeper.
Wahid Ferdous et al (2014)[7]conducted test using
composite materials for railway sleepers and they analyze
the sleepers by modifying the shape of the sleepers. The
results shows that the optimized shape of sleeper reduces
approximately 2/3 volumes of material. Behavior of
optimized composite sleeper is comparable with timber
sleeper. The vertical deflection, bending stress and sleeperballast contact pressure are obtained within the allowable
limit.
II.
Materials
Glass Fibre Reinforced Polyurethane
Fibre reinforced Foamed Urethane FFU sleepers
are made of continuous glass fibre reinforced rigid
polyurethane foam. The foam contains advantages over
plastic and wood, e.g., durability and corrosion resistance,
electrical insulation, light weight and strength, and good
fabrication/assembly/coating.Contrary to concrete, the high
damping characteristic of FFU bearers would be beneficial
to the impact and vibration absorption at turnout crossings
transferring to supporting components.
Sleeper section
Conventional Sleeper:
Length
: 2750 mm
Width
Top
: 150 mm
Bottom
: 250 mm
Height
: 185 mm
Sleeper spacing :500mm
Y Sleeper:
Size
: 130x160x2600 mm
Laying distance between Y sleepers
Axes
: 576 mm
Properties
Prestressed concrete
Density
: 2400 kg/mm3
Young's Modulus: 30000 MPa
Poissons ratio : 0.3
Glass fibre reinforced polyurethane
Youngs modulus : 8100 MPa
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Poissons ratio
: 0.3
Methodology
ANSYS
ANSYS civil software is a comprehensive FEA
analysis (finite element) tool for structural analysis,
including linear, nonlinear and dynamic studies. The
engineering simulation product provides a complete set of
elements behavior, material models and equation solvers for
a wide range of structural design problems. ANSYS has
proven to be the most integrated, productive and practical
general purpose structural program on the market today. A
three-dimensional nonlinear finite element model of a
railway sleeper is developed by a general purpose finite
element analysis package, ANSYS.
Sleeper models were created in ANSYS
mechanical APDL software and meshed. The solid 20node
186 was assigned as element type. Then the models were
exported to ANSYS workbench software. The properties of
prestressed concrete and glass fibre reinforced polyurethane
were assigned to the sleepers using engineering data options.
The boundary conditions and ballast actions were assigned
using support conditions option in workbench. The load was
applied as a point load at the rail seat locations. The rail axle
load was assumed as 230 kN.
III.
General
The sleeper models were created using ANSYS. A
total of 8 types of sleepers were created. They were
prestressed normal shaped sleeper, composite normal shaped
sleeper, prestressed multiple normal shaped sleepers,
composite multiple normal shaped sleepers, prestressed Y
shaped sleeper, composite Y shaped sleeper, prestressed
multiple Y shaped sleepers, composite multiple Y shaped
sleepers.
Vonmises stress results
Vonmises stresses produced on various sleepers
due to the application of load are shown in Figures 3.1 to
3.4.
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IV.
CONCLUSION
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REFERENCES
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(2012),Evaluation of Engineering Properties For
Polypropylene
Fibre
Reinforced
ConcreteInternational Journal Of Advanced Engineering
Technology ,Vol.iii, Issue I,pp.42-45.
[2] Kishore Kumar D. and Sambasivarao K., Static and
Dynamic Analysis of Railway Track Sleeper,
International Journal of Engineering Research and
General Science Volume 2, Issue 6, OctoberNovember, 2014 ISSN 2091-2730 662.
[3] Eswaramoorthi.P,ArunkumarG.E(2014), Fibers Study
on Properties of Geopolymer concrete with
Polypropylene, International Refereed Journal of
Engineering and Science, Vol. 3, pp.60-75.
[4] Gaurav Saini1, Dr. Tilak Raj and Arnav Sharma, (2015)
Design and Contact Analysis of Rail Track Using
Solidworks and ANSYS, International Journal of
Advanced Technology in Engineering and Science, Vol.
03, Special Issue 1, pp. 2348 7550.
[5] Parveen, Ankit Sharma (2013), Structural Behaviour of
Fibrous Concrete Using Polypropylene FibresInternational Journal of Modern Engineering Research ,
Vol.3, Issue.3, pp-599-603.
[6] Malik and Pawan (2014), Plastics And Frp Materials
Used In Railways, Journal on Civil Engineering
May 2014, Vol. 4 Issue 2, p1.
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