The Effect of Various Contaminants on the Surface Tribological Properties of Rail and Wheel Materials: An Experimental Approach
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Effect of Temperature
1.2. Effect of Humidity
1.3. Effect of Lubricant
1.4. Effect of Parameters
2. Materials and Experiment
2.1. Experimental Setup
2.2. Materials
2.3. Experimental Details
- PO is the initial contact Hertzian pressure in Mpa,
- F is the applied normal load in N (5 N, 10 N, and 15 N for this investigation),
- ν is the Poisson’s ratio of the pin and disc,
- Eeff is the effective elastic modulus of the contacting bodies in Pa−1,
- Rpin is the radius of curvature of the hemispherical nose of the cylindrical pin in mm,
- Rdisc is the radius of the curvature of the flat disc in mm.
- is the Poisson’s ratio of pin (0.3 for this investigation),
- is the Poisson’s ratio of the disc (0.3 for this investigation),
- is Young’s modulus of the pin in GPa (190 GPa for this investigation),
- is Young’s modulus of the disc in GPa (200 GPa for this investigation).
- h is the total height of the pin in mm (30 mm for this investigation),
- r is the radius of the hemispherical nose in mm (4 mm for this investigation).
- D is the diameter of the disc in mm (155 mm for this investigation),
- t is the thickness of the disc in mm (8 mm for this investigation).
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Friction Force
3.2. Wear Depth
3.3. Effect of Load on Friction Force
3.4. Effect of Load on Wear Depth
4. Conclusions
- Both contaminants and load affected the wear rate, frictional levels, and wear depth of the rail track and wheel
- Among all the contaminants, the grease showed the least frictional levels, followed by leaves, mist, dry, and sand, irrespective of the load. However, these frictional levels increased as the load increased for all the contaminants.
- The wear depth increased with the increase in load for all the contaminants. Among all the contaminants, the highest wear depth was observed for sand contaminants, followed by dry, mist, leaves, and grease.
- The fluctuations in the frictional force increased with the increase in load for all the contaminants. The frictional forces were highest for sand conditions followed by dry, mist, leaves, and grease.
- It can be summarised that contaminants such as leaves and mist around the rail track are rather more desirable than leaving the rail track dry. However, the contaminant sand around the rail track is not desirable.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Specification | C % | Mn % | P % | S % | Si % |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
IRS: R19/93 | 0.52 | 0.60–0.85 | 0.03 | 0.03 | 0.15–0.4 |
Specification | Yield Strength (MPa) | Ultimate Tensile Strength (MPa) |
---|---|---|
IRS: R19/93 | 50% of Ultmiate tensile strength | 820–940 |
Specification | C % | Mn % | P % | S % | Si % | Al % |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rail (grade 880) | 0.60–0.80 | 0.80–1.35 | 0.03 | 0.03 | 0.10–0.50 | 0.015 |
Specification | Yield Strength (MPa) | Ultimate Tensile Strength (MPa) |
---|---|---|
Rail (grade 880) | 460 | 880 |
Parameters | Dry |
---|---|
Temperature (°C) | 24.9 |
Relative Humidity (%) | 66 |
Load (N) | 5, 10, 15 |
Sliding Distance (m) | 100 |
Time (s) | 100 |
sliding velocity (m/s) | 1 |
Conditions | Variables | 5 N | 10 N | 15 N |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dry | Track diameter (mm) | 15 | 22 | 40 |
RPM | 1273 | 868 | 477 | |
Leaves | Track diameter (mm) | 48 | 54 | 60 |
RPM | 398 | 354 | 318 | |
Sand | Track diameter (mm) | 72 | 76 | 82 |
RPM | 265 | 251 | 239 | |
MQL | Track diameter (mm) | 94 | 90 | 88 |
RPM | .212 | 212 | 217 | |
Grease | Track diameter (mm) | 96 | 104 | 108 |
RPM | 199 | 184 | 174 |
Name | Method | Units | Grease Specification |
---|---|---|---|
Thickener | - | - | Lithium |
Base Oil | - | - | Mineral Oil |
Appearance | BAM 300 | - | Bright and shiny |
Structure | - | - | Smooth and buttery |
NLGI Grade | ASTM D 217 | - | 3 |
Dropping Point | IP 132 | °C | 192 |
Cone Penetration (60 strokes) | IP 50 | 10 ths/mm | 231 |
Base Oil Viscosity (at 100 °C) | IP 71 | cSt | 15.4 |
4 Ball Weld Point | IP 239 | kg | 200 |
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Singh, R.K.; Shindhe, M.; Rawat, P.; Srivastava, A.K.; Singh, G.K.; Verma, R.; Bhutto, J.K.; Hussein, H.S. The Effect of Various Contaminants on the Surface Tribological Properties of Rail and Wheel Materials: An Experimental Approach. Coatings 2023, 13, 560. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings13030560
Singh RK, Shindhe M, Rawat P, Srivastava AK, Singh GK, Verma R, Bhutto JK, Hussein HS. The Effect of Various Contaminants on the Surface Tribological Properties of Rail and Wheel Materials: An Experimental Approach. Coatings. 2023; 13(3):560. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings13030560
Chicago/Turabian StyleSingh, Rabesh Kumar, Mahesh Shindhe, Prashant Rawat, Ashish Kumar Srivastava, Gyanendra Kumar Singh, Rajesh Verma, Javed Khan Bhutto, and Hany S. Hussein. 2023. "The Effect of Various Contaminants on the Surface Tribological Properties of Rail and Wheel Materials: An Experimental Approach" Coatings 13, no. 3: 560. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings13030560
APA StyleSingh, R. K., Shindhe, M., Rawat, P., Srivastava, A. K., Singh, G. K., Verma, R., Bhutto, J. K., & Hussein, H. S. (2023). The Effect of Various Contaminants on the Surface Tribological Properties of Rail and Wheel Materials: An Experimental Approach. Coatings, 13(3), 560. https://doi.org/10.3390/coatings13030560