Towards a Standard Approach for the Twin Disc Testing of Top-Of Rail Friction Management Products
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Test Requirements and Review
2.1. Apparatus
2.2. Specimens
2.3. Test Contact Conditions
2.4. Product Application
2.5. Results and Interpretation
2.5.1. Effective Friction Data
2.5.2. Retentivity Data
3. Proposed Test Specifications
- Pre-test preparation and measurements
- Manufacture specimens to specification shown in Section 3.1;
- Grind to 1 µm Ra (measured laterally across disc);
- Select desired normal load, dependent on the railway system to be simulated;
- Plan sufficient repeats and test randomisation/blinding if required [27];
- Measure disc mass and roughness;
- Surface images.
- Test execution and measurements during the test
- Dry run-in (low load and slip to condition discs);
- Measure friction, load and slip;
- Room temperature and humidity;
- Any unusual behaviour of the test specimen (noise, visible surface change, change in wear debris);
- Any unusual product behaviour (visible fling-off, colour changes).
- Post-test measurement, analysis and data presentation
- Disc mass before cleaning (can be used to estimate mass of product remaining on surface);
- Roughness;
- Surface images;
- Show effective friction and retentivity. Plot results alongside a dry baseline.
3.1. Pre-Test Preparation and Measurements
3.2. Test Execution and Measurements during the Test
- Conventional rail system: 1200 MPa and 1% slip;
- Light rail system: 900 MPa and 1% slip;
- Heavy haul freight system: 1500 MPa and 1% slip.
3.3. Post-Test Measurement, Analysis and Data Presentation
- “effective friction” (friction to be expected if the top-of-rail product has been effectively transferred to the wheel/rail interface)—from averaging the friction in a steady state region. TOR products would be expected to give an “intermediate” level of friction (0.2–0.4).
- “retentivity” (measure of how long a product is able to retain its respective effective friction level before being consumed from a wheel/rail contact and eventually returning to the dry baseline friction level)—by working out the number of cycles for a “dry” friction value to be reached. There is no specified value for “retentivity”, but the longer a product can give friction in the required range the better.
- cycles in the “intermediate friction regime” for top-of-rail products could also be defined if there is a desired range of effective friction (for example if the product user requires a friction coefficient of 0.2–0.35).
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Test Configuration | Twin Disc (Two 47 mm Diameter Cylinders, 10 mm Contact Width) | Ball-on-Flat (Mini-Traction Machine Set-Up, 10 mm Ball Diameter) |
---|---|---|
Contact area (m2) | 6.29 × 10−6 | 3.49 × 10−8 |
Contact pressure (MPa) | 1500 | 1500 |
Contact area after 5 microns of wear (m2) | 6.29 × 10−6 | 6.28 × 10−7 (non-Hertzian) |
Contact pressure after 5 microns of wear (MPa) | 1500 | 55.73 (non-Hertzian) |
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White, B.; Lee, Z.S.; Lewis, R. Towards a Standard Approach for the Twin Disc Testing of Top-Of Rail Friction Management Products. Lubricants 2022, 10, 124. https://doi.org/10.3390/lubricants10060124
White B, Lee ZS, Lewis R. Towards a Standard Approach for the Twin Disc Testing of Top-Of Rail Friction Management Products. Lubricants. 2022; 10(6):124. https://doi.org/10.3390/lubricants10060124
Chicago/Turabian StyleWhite, Ben, Zing Siang Lee, and Roger Lewis. 2022. "Towards a Standard Approach for the Twin Disc Testing of Top-Of Rail Friction Management Products" Lubricants 10, no. 6: 124. https://doi.org/10.3390/lubricants10060124
APA StyleWhite, B., Lee, Z. S., & Lewis, R. (2022). Towards a Standard Approach for the Twin Disc Testing of Top-Of Rail Friction Management Products. Lubricants, 10(6), 124. https://doi.org/10.3390/lubricants10060124