Abstract

A brake hardware-in-the-loop simulation (HILS) system for a railway vehicle is widely applied to estimate and validate braking performance in research studies and field tests. When we develop a simulation model for a full vehicle system, the characteristics of all components are generally properly simplified based on the understanding of each component’s purpose and interaction with other components. The friction coefficient between the brake disc and the pad used in simulations has been conventionally considered constant, and the effect of a variable friction coefficient is ignored with the assumption that the variability affects the performance of the vehicle braking very little. However, the friction coefficient of a disc pad changes significantly within a range due to environmental conditions, and thus, the friction coefficient can affect the performance of the brakes considerably, especially on the wheel slide. In this paper, we apply a variable friction coefficient and analyzed the effects of the variable friction coefficient on a mechanical brake system of a railway vehicle. We introduce a mathematical formula for the variable friction coefficient in which the variable friction is represented by two variables and five parameters. The proposed formula is applied to real-time simulations using a brake HILS system, and the effectiveness of the formula is verified experimentally by testing the mechanical braking performance of the brake HILS system.

Highlights

  • It is difficult and complicated to estimate the performance of the brake system of a railway vehicle on vehicle running conditions because it is dangerous to test various emergency situations

  • For a mechanical brake system of a railway vehicle, the effect of a varying friction coefficient between the disc and the pad has been analyzed and demonstrated in this paper using a brake hardware-in-the-loop simulation (HILS) system developed in our laboratory

  • A formula for the variable friction coefficient between the disc and the pad was introduced based on measured data from dynamometer tests in which the variable friction coefficient using five parameters is a function of the friction speed and the increase in the temperature

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Summary

Introduction

It is difficult and complicated to estimate the performance of the brake system of a railway vehicle on vehicle running conditions because it is dangerous to test various emergency situations.

Results
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