1. Introduction
Higher operational efficiency, as a precondition for maintaining the leading position in the global transportation market, can be achieved through the introduction of articulated wagons on railways. A special feature of such wagons is the two-section carrying structure resting on three bogies. The sections interact through a joint assembly.
The lower material capacity of the carrying structure of a wagon, under observance of the conditions of strength and operational reliability, can be achieved with the use of circular tubes in the carrying structure elements. Previous research enabled us to conclude that such implementation could decrease the tare weight of a wagon by 3–5% in comparison with that of a prototype wagon. However, the problem of determining the fatigue strength under operation remains unsolved. It is known that one of the most considerable loads on a wagon in operation is the dynamic load, and the main devices absorbing the kinetic energy that affects the carrying structure of a wagon are automatic couplers or buffer devices. However, they cannot fully absorb the kinetic energy under increased normative values of dynamic loads. It causes damage to the carrying structures of wagons in operation and requires off-schedule repairs. Therefore, there is a need to develop and implement new draft gear concepts for rail vehicles.
The structural and design features of a universal long-base wagon for intermodal transportation in Europe are presented in [
1], which provides the results of strength calculations for the carrying structure of a wagon. However, the study does not propose any measures to decrease the dynamic load under operation at the design stage.
The Department for Mechanics and Applied Information of the Military University of Technology (Poland) has developed a specialized wagon with a low rotary loading platform [
2]. The wagon is intended for transportation of trucks by rail. A previous study [
3] presented the calculation of dynamic indices for this wagon. The factor of safety against wagon overturning was studied when the wagon entered a curve at various traffic speeds. However, the issue of improving the coupling device of the wagon to reduce its dynamic load in these works was not studied.
Some measures to improve the carrying structure of a wagon are proposed in [
4]. The study provides the results of a strength calculation for the carrying structure of a wagon realized in LIRA software. The authors considered the normative load values on a wagon in operation for the strength calculation but the study does not give refined dynamic load values on the improved wagon structure.
The mean dynamic load on transport under a longitudinal impact is presented in [
5]. The study used accelerations as dynamic load components for the experimental variable. The authors did not propose measures for improving the wagon coupler to lower the dynamic load during operation.
The structures of the BCNHL wagons are analyzed in [
6]. The authors discuss some possible ways to improve the technical and economic parameters of wagons for higher operational efficiency.
The results of the structural finite element analysis of a freight wagon using the finite element method are presented in [
7]. The research was conducted using the BOXN25 open wagon used by Indian Railways.
The objective of this study was to demonstrate some peculiarities in computation of the dynamic load and strength of the carrying structure of an articulated wagon of circular tubes. To achieve the objective, the following tasks were set:
To propose techniques for lowering the dynamic load on articulated wagons in operation,
To conduct mathematic modeling of dynamic loads on the carrying structure of a circular-tube articulated wagon, and
To determine the basic strength parameters of the carrying structure of an articulated circular-tube wagon.
2. Improvement of the Draft Gear for Articulated Circular-Tube Wagons
The absorber of the autocoupling device of the wagon is designed to mitigate the longitudinal (tensile and compressive) forces arising in the train during operation and transfer them to the supporting structure of the car. Sh-2-V-90 draft gears are used on wide-gauge freight wagons (
Figure 1).
The acting forces are decreased due to transformation of the kinetic energy of the masses of the interacting wagons into the work of the friction forces of the friction wedges and into the potential energy of the springs. The draft gear protects the carriage, as well as the cargo transported in it, from harmful dynamic effects. This is especially important at the present time in connection with the increases in the masses and speeds of trains, as well as the increase in the intensity of shunting operations.
This type of draft gear has significant disadvantages in operation, such as the technological complexity of manufacturing, as well as technical maintenance, limited energy dissipation, and insufficient reliability in operation. As such, it is necessary to develop alternative designs of draft gears for the automatic couplers of wagons.
We propose a draft gear concept for a lower dynamic load on wagons under operational modes (
Figure 2).
The kinetic impact energy is absorbed through its transformation into the work of viscous dissipated forces. The resistance is formed when the piston transfers the viscous liquid through the throttle openings by the operational principle of a hydraulic damper. The system returns to its initial state with release of a spring in the telescopic element.
This draft gear concept can be used for railway vehicles with closed-section center sills. This engineering solution can be used, for example, for wagons with circular-tube carrying elements (
Figure 3). The frames of such wagons are presented in
Figure 4.
3. Dynamic Load Mathematical Modeling of the Load-Bearing Structures of Articulated Circular-Tube Wagons
The dynamic load of the carrying structure of a wagon with the draft gear concept was defined with the mathematic functional notation of dynamic load under a longitudinal force on the front draft gear stop (tension-jerk). The calculation was conducted using an example of an articulated flat wagon, which is one of the most popular types of articulated wagons in service. The design diagram is presented in
Figure 5.
where
,
,
M’Wi is the gross mass of the
ith section of a flat wagon,
MWi is the mass of the carrying structure of the
ith section of a flat wagon,
IWi is the inertia moment of the
ith section of a flat wagon,
Pl is the longitudinal force on the automatic coupler,
β is the viscous resistance coefficient formed by the draft gear concept,
l is the half-base of a flat wagon section,
FFR is the absolute value of the dry force in a spring group,
k’ is the rigidity of the connection between the sections,
k1 and
k2 are the stiffness of the springs in the spring group of a flat wagon’s bogie (of Model 18-100),
mi is the container mass,
zci is the height of the container’s center of gravity,
Ii is the inertia moment of the
i-th container, and
xi,
ϕi and
zi are coordinates corresponding to displacements of the flat wagon sections relative to the appropriate axels.
The research was conducted in the plane coordinates [
8]. The sections had elastic interaction between them. The longitudinal load on the carrying structure of a flat wagon was taken as 2.5 MN [
9,
10]. The initial displacements and speeds were taken as zero. Differential Equations (1)–(12) were solved using algorithms created by the authors based on the Runge–Kutta method, considering the specifics of the task using the approaches described in [
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18]. We found that the stability of the numerical solution is achieved at the integration step
h = 0.0001 s.
The results of calculation showed that accelerations on the carrying structure of the first section of a flat wagon from the force action were 34.9 m/s
2, and 34.2 m/s
2 on the second section (
Figure 6). The viscous resistance coefficient formed by the draft gear concept should exceed 70 kN s/m.
The acceleration curve of the sections under the action of the longitudinal load on the wagon at the initial moment of time is explained by the first section receiving the impact through the viscous link in the draft gear and the load being transferred to the second section through the elastic link, which simulates the joint of the sections with each other. Thus, application of the draft gear concept for an articulated flat wagon makes it possible to reduce the dynamic load by about 10%. The calculation was also completed for other types of articulated circular-tube wagons. The numerical values of the accelerations are listed in
Table 1. The research conducted proved the efficiency of the draft gear concept for railway vehicles (
Figure 7,
Figure 8 and
Figure 9).
4. Results of Computational Modeling
We also computed strength factors for the carrying structures of circular-tube wagons. Let us consider some peculiarities of strength calculations for the carrying structure of an articulate flat wagon with the finite element method realized in CosmosWorks software [
19,
20,
21,
22,
23,
24]. The design diagram of the carrying structure of a flat wagon for design mode I (jerk) is given in
Figure 10. A longitudinal load of 2.5 MN was applied to the front stops.
We considered that each section of the flat wagon was loaded with two 20-foot containers. The vertical load from the containers was applied to the horizontal surfaces of fitting stops in the form of the remote load, with consideration of the center of gravity of the container.
A finite element model of the carrying structure of a flat wagon was built with spatial isoparametric tetrahedrons. The optimal number of elements in the mesh was determined with the graph-analytical method. The number of elements in the mesh was 5,406,526 and the number of nodes was 1,538,366. The maximum size of an element in the mesh was 15 mm, the minimum size was 3 mm, and the maximum element side ratio was 3078.9. The percentage of elements with a side ratio less than 3 was 87.6% and the percentage with more than 10 was 0.212%. The number of elements in the circle was 8 and the element size gain ratio was 1.7. The model was fixed in the zones where the carrying structure rested on the gearing parts.
The results of the strength calculation for the carrying structure for a flat wagon are given below. The maximum equivalent stresses were concentrated in the end parts of the center sill and accounted for about 180 MPa; thus, they did not exceed the admissible values (
Figure 11).
The maximum displacements in the structural nodes were taken in the middle sections; they accounted for 3.4 mm (
Figure 12). The maximum strain was 2.3 × 10
−3.
Strength calculations were also conducted for other types of articulated wagon (
Table 2).
The method described in [
25] was used to determine the design life of wagons designed using the developed computational models:
where
is the average value of strength endurance of a detail,
n is the admissible safety factor,
m is the degree of fatigue curve,
N0 is the number of tests,
B is the coefficient characterizing a period of continuous work of an object,
is the effective frequency of dynamic load, and
is the amplitude of equivalent dynamic loads. The calculation results showed that the design lifetime of the proposed carrying structure models of the wagons exceeded 32 years.
5. Discussion
In
Section 1, the goal was to reduce the dynamic load of the load-bearing structures of articulated circular-tube wagons in operation. This goal was achieved by improving of the automatic coupler of the wagon. The introduction of this device is possible in wagons whose central frame support has a closed cross-section. To substantiate the proposed solution, we mathematically modeled the dynamic load on the wagon under the influence of longitudinal loads. The results of the calculation led to the conclusion that, by considering the new draft gear concept in articulated wagons, a reduction in dynamic load of almost 10% is possible (
Table 1).
The obtained results were used in strength calculations of articulated wagons. The calculation was carried out in the CosmosWorks software package using the finite element method. The calculation results showing the strength of the load-bearing structures of articulated wagons are provided in
Table 2.
The limitations of this study are that the strength calculations did not consider the elastic bonds in the bearing zones of the wagons on the chassis. These restrictions will be taken into account in further investigations in this direction.
These investigations will help to reduce the dynamic load on the load-bearing structures of articulated wagons during operation, ensuring the strength of the supporting structures of articulated wagons and reducing the costs of unscheduled repairs. Studies have also been carried out that will help to create innovative new-generation wagons that will improve the efficiency of the transportation industry.
6. Conclusions
We propose a draft gear concept for lowering the dynamic load of wagons under operational modes. The draft gear concept can be implemented for rail vehicles with closed-section center sills (e.g., for the carrying structure of a circular-tube wagon). The peculiarity of the concept is the possibility to transform the impact kinetic energy into the work of viscous resistance forces emerging in the concept.
We focused on the mathematical modeling of dynamic loads on the carrying structure of an articulated circular-tube wagon. The strength of a flat wagon structure was also calculated. The results of the calculation showed that the accelerations on the carrying structure of the first section of a flat wagon from the action force were 34.9 m/s2 and those on the second section were 34.2 m/s2. For an open wagon, the accelerations that acted on the first section from the side of the longitudinal force were 28.3 m/s2 and those on the second were 27.9 m/s2. For the boxcar and the hopper wagon, the accelerations acting on the first section are 25.7 and 28.5 m/s2, respectively, and 25.2 and 28.1 m/s2 for the second, respectively.
We established that the use of the draft gear concept for articulated wagons can help decrease the dynamic load by about 10%.
This study presents the basic strength parameters of the carrying structure of an articulated circular-tube wagon. The strength of a flat wagon structure was also calculated. We established that the maximum equivalent stresses emerging in the end parts of the center sills accounted for 180 MPa and, thus, they did not exceed the admissible values. The maximum displacements in the nodes of the carrying structure were 3.4 mm. The maximum equivalent stresses acting on the supporting structure of the open wagon were 298 MPa and the displacement in the nodes of the structure was 3.2 mm. For a boxcar and a hopper wagon, the maximum equivalent stresses were, respectively, 297 and 280 MPa and the displacements were 4.0 and 5.6 mm.
The results of strength calculations for the carrying structure of other wagons also confirmed the effectiveness of the design solutions.
The research conducted will encourage engineers to design modern structures for railway vehicles with higher efficiency in service.