Abstract
Ballasted railway track requires regular maintenance to reverse the effects of plastic deformation of the trackbed, which leads to a gradual loss of level. Maintenance is usually by tamping, an aggressive process, which damages ballast grains such that the interval between maintenance interventions steadily reduces with increasing number of tamps. After a certain number of tamps, the ballast is deemed life expired and renewed, with the recovered ballast usually being down-cycled to lower grade uses. The ability to re-use the recovered ballast in the trackbed would make a significant contribution to decarbonising and improving the sustainability of railway infrastructure. This requires detailed knowledge of how the grain characteristics affecting mechanical behaviour differ between fresh and used ballast—specifically grain shape. This paper compares the shape parameters of form, angularity and surface roughness of fresh and used ballast, and proposes a method to synthesize full-size and scaled used ballast for use in laboratory and model tests.
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