Abstract

As essential track components for rail connections and signal transmission and control, insulated rail joints (IRJs) have been widely used in traditional and high-speed railways. However, the IRJ is considered as one of the weakest parts of railway track structures due to the significant discontinuities in stiffness and geometry. When a train runs over an IRJ, a wheel-rail impact occurs and it increases with train speed. The impact consequently leads to vibration and noise and accelerates track deterioration in the vicinity of the IRJ. This paper establishes an explicit finite element wheel-IRJ dynamic interaction model to simulate high-frequency impact vibration and noise generated at a typical IRJ in the Dutch railway network, and validates the model against a comprehensive hammer test and a pass-by measurement. Good agreements between the simulation and measurements indicate that the proposed model can effectively reproduce high-frequency impact vibration and noise up to 10 kHz. This paper also connects the dominant frequencies of wheel-IRJ impact vibration and noise with the dynamic behaviour of the target IRJ, which may contribute to the mitigation of impact vibration and noise at IRJs as well as to train-borne detection of deterioration types of IRJs.

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