Abstract

Due to the limitation of the geological environment, many railways around the world are built in desert areas. The intrusion of sand particles can increase the stiffness of ballast beds and cause corrosion and fracture of fasteners, turnout blockage, etc., even affecting the service safety of railways. In the paper, based on the results of field and laboratory tests, a three-dimensional discrete element model of the sandy ballast bed is developed to study the effect of sand intrusion on the load sharing ratio of sleepers, contact forces between ballast particles, displacements of ballast particles, and energy dissipation in ballast beds. The results show that the axle load in sandy tracks is mainly shared by three sleepers under the single-axle load and six sleepers under the dual-axle load. The maximum contact force under the sleeper in the sandy ballast bed is about 80% larger than that in the clean ballast bed and its normal and tangential contact forces are also larger than that in the clean ballast bed. The ballast particles at the ballast shoulder of the clean ballast bed move downward in the direction of less than 45°, while those in the sandy ballast bed move outward at the direction of 90°. The sand intrusion inhibits the movement of ballast particles and may cause a rheological phenomenon of ballast particles at the ballast shoulder. The intrusion of sand particles mainly affects the elastic strain energy and damping energy in ballast beds but has less effect on friction energy and kinetic energy.

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