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Abstract

The paper focuses on the influence of the longitudinal and lateral suspension damping in correlation with the velocity upon the vibration behaviour of the railway vehicles while moving on a tangent track. The numerical simulations are developed based on a linear model of a 17-degree of freedom vehicle that allows the evaluation of the dynamic behaviour of the vehicle in a sub-critical velocity. Based on the response frequency functions of the vehicle in a harmonic and in a random behaviour, a series of basic properties of the stable behaviour of the forced lateral vibrations has been made evident, as well as the opportunities to lower the level of the carbody vibrations by changing the suspension damping.

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Bibliography

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Authors and Affiliations

Mădălina Dumitriu

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Abstract

To study the impact of suspended equipment on the ride comfort in a railway vehicle, a rigid flexible general model of such a vehicle is required. The numerical simulations is based on two different models, derived from the general model of the vehicle, namely a reference model of a vehicle with no equipment, and another model with six suspended elements of equipment mounted in various positions along the carbody. The objective of this paper arises from the observation that the literature does not contain any study that highlights the change in the ride comfort resulting exclusively due to the influence of equipment. The influence of the suspended equipment on the ride comfort is determined by comparing the ride comfort indices calculated in the carbody reference points, at the centre and above the two bogies, for a model with six elements of equipment and a model of the vehicle with no equipment.

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Bibliography

[1] T. Tomioka, T. Takigami, and Y. Suzuki. Numerical analysis of three-dimensional flexural vibration of railway vehicle car body. Vehicle System Dynamics, 44:272–285, 2006. doi: 10.1080/00423110600871301.
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[6] H. Ye, J. Zeng, Q. Wang, and X. Han. Study on carbody flexible vibration considering layout of underneath equipment and doors. In: 4th International Conference on Sensors, Measurement and Intelligent Materials (ICSMIM 2015), pages 1177–1183, Shenzhen, China, 27–28 December, 2015.
[7] G. Luo, J. Zeng, and Q. Wang. Identifying the relationship between suspension parameters of underframe equipment and carbody modal frequency. Journal of Modern Transportation, 22(4):206–213, 2014. doi: 10.1007/s40534-014-0060-0.
[8] M. Dumitriu. Influence of suspended equipment on the carbody vertical vibration behaviour of high-speed railway vehicles. Archive of Mechanical Engineering, 63(1):145–162, 2016. doi: 10.1515/meceng-2016-0008.
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[19] C 116. Interaction between vehicles and track. RP 1, Power spectral density of track irregularities, Part 1: Definitions, conventions and available data. Utrecht, 1971.
[20] ENV 12299. Railway applications ride comfort for passengers measurement and evaluation, 1997.
[21] UIC 513 R. Guidelines for evaluating passenger comfort in relation to vibration in railway vehicle, International Union of Railways, 1994.
[22] J. Zhou, R. Goodall, L.Ren, and H. Zhang. Influences of car body vertical flexibility on ride quality of passenger railway vehicles. Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineering Part F: Journal Rail and Rapid Transit, 223(5):461–471, 2009. doi: 10.1243/09544097JRRT272.
[23] J. Zhou, W. Sun, and D. Gong. Analysis on geometric filtering phenomenon and flexible car body resonant vibration of railway vehicles. Journal of Tongji University, 37(9):1653–1657, 2009 (in Chinese).
[24] D. Gong, J. Zhou, and W. Sun. On the resonant vibration of a flexible railway car body and its suppression with a dynamic vibration absorber. Journal of Vibration and Control, 19(5):649– 657, 2013. doi: 10.1177/1077546312437435.
[25] D. Gong, Y.J. Gu, and J.S. Zhou. Study on geometry filtering phenomenon and flexible car body resonant vibration of articulated trains. Advanced Materials Research, 787:542–547, 2013. doi: 10.4028/www.scientific.net/AMR.787.542.
[26] M. Dumitriu. Analysis of the dynamic response in the railway vehicles to the track vertical irregularities. Part I: The theoretical model and the vehicle response functions. Journal of Engineering Science and Technology Review, 8(4):24–31, 2015.
[27] M. Dumitriu. Analysis of the dynamic response in the railway vehicles to the track vertical irregularities. Part II: The numerical analysis. Journal of Engineering Science and Technology Review, 8(4):32–39, 2015.
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Authors and Affiliations

Mădălina Dumitriu
1

  1. Department of Railway Vehicles, University Politehnica of Bucharest, Bucharest, Romania
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Abstract

The equipment mounted on the carbody chassis of the railway vehicles is a critical component of the vehicle in terms of ride comfort. The reason for that is their large mass, able to visibly influence the vibrations mode of the carbody. The paper examines the influence of the equipment upon the mode of vertical vibrations of the carbody in the high-speed vehicles, reached on the basis of the frequency response functions of the acceleration in three carbody reference points – at the centre and above the bogies. These functions are derived from the numerical simulations developed on a rigid-flexible coupled model, with seven degrees of freedom. As a rule, the results herein prove the influence of the equipment mounting mode (rigid or elastic), along with the speed regime, upon the level of vibrations in the carbody reference points, at the resonance frequency of the symmetrical bending mode. Similarly, it is also demonstrated how the equipment mass and the damping degree of the suspension system affect the level of the vibrations in the carbody.

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Authors and Affiliations

Mădălina Dumitriu
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Abstract

The paper focuses on a nonlinear model to represent the mechanical behaviour of a mix coil spring – rubber used in the secondary suspension of passenger rail vehicles. The principle of the model relies on overlapping of the forces corresponding to three components – the elastic component, the viscous component and the dry friction component. The model has two sources on non-linearity, in the elastic force and the friction force, respectively. The main attributes of the model are made visible by its response to an imposed displacement-type harmonic excitation. The results thus obtained from the applications of numerical simulation show a series of basic properties of the model, namely the dependence on amplitude and the excitation frequency of the model response, as well as of its stiffness and damping.

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Authors and Affiliations

Mădălina Dumitriu
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Abstract

This paper evaluates the level of the vertical vibrations in a railway vehicle carbody generated by the track irregularities and examines the position of the critical point from the comfort perspective. The issue is reviewed on the basis of both a „rigid carbody” model and a „flexible carbody” model, which considers the first two carbody bending modes. The model errors are calculated as a function of the speed behaviour, and the results prove that the comfort performance of a railway vehicle evaluated on the „rigid carbody” model basis are overestimated compared to the ones derived from the implementation of the „flexible carbody” model, mainly at the centre of the carbody. Similarly, a correct estimation of the critical point position in the level of vibrations requires the modelling of the structural vibrations of the vehicle carbody.

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Authors and Affiliations

Mădălina Dumitriu
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Abstract

The article investigates the influence of the carbody vertical flexibility on the ride comfort of the railway vehicles. The ride comfort is evaluated via the comfort index calculated in three reference points of the carbody. The results of the numerical simulations bring attention to the importance of the carbody symmetrical vertical bending upon the dynamic response of the vehicle, mainly at high velocities. Another conclusion is that the ride comfort can be significantly affected as a function of the symmetrical bending frequency of the carbody. Similarly, there are improvement possibilities for the ride comfort when the best selection of the stiffness in the longitudinal traction system between the carbody and bogie and the vertical suspension damping is made.

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Bibliography

[1] M. Dumitriu and I. Sebeşan. The quality of railway vehicles. MatrixRom, Bucharest, 2016. (in Romanian).
[2] J. Zhou, R. Goodall, L. Ren, and H. Zhang. Influences of car body vertical flexibility on ride quality of passenger railway vehicles. Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part F: Journal of Rail and Rapid Transit, 223(5):461–471, 2009. doi: 10.1243/09544097JRRT272.
[3] G. Diana, F. Cheli, A. Collina, R. Corradi, and S. Melzi. The development of a numerical model for railway vehicles comfort assessment through comparison with experimental measurements. Vehicle System Dynamics, 38(3):165–183, 2002. doi: 10.1076/vesd.38.3.165.8287.
[4] F. Cheli and R. Corradi. On rail vehicle vibrations induced by track unevenness: Analysis of the excitation mechanism. Journal of Sound and Vibration, 330(15):3744–3765, 2011. doi: 10.1016/j.jsv.2011.02.025.
[5] D. Gong, J. Zhou, and W. Sun. On the resonant vibration of a flexible railway car body and its suppression with a dynamic vibration absorber. Journal of Vibration and Control, 19(5):649–657, 2013. doi: 10.1177/1077546312437435.
[6] M. Dumitriu. Analysis of the dynamic response in the railway vehicles to the track vertical irregularities. Part II: The numerical analysis. Journal of Engineering Science and Technology Review, 8(4):32–39, 2015.
[7] P. Carlbom. Carbody and Passengers in Rail Vehicle Dynamics. Ph.D. Thesis, KTH, Vehicle Engineering, Stockholm, Sweden, 2000. NR 20140805.
[8] T. Tomioka, T. Takigami, and Y. Suzuki. Numerical analysis of three-dimensional flexural vibration of railway vehicle car body. Vehicle System Dynamics, 44(sup1):272–285, 2006. doi: 10.1080/00423110600871301.
[9] M. Dumitriu. On the critical points of vertical vibration in a railway vehicle. Archive of Mechanical Engineering, 61(4):609–625, 2014. doi: 10.2478/meceng-2014-0035.
[10] ENV 12299: Railway applications ride comfort for passengers measurement and evaluation, 1997.
[11] UIC 513 R: Guidelines for evaluating passenger comfort in relation to vibration in railway vehicle. International Union of Railways, 1994.
[12] S. Bruni, J. Vinolas, M. Berg, O. Polach, and S. Stichel. Modelling of suspension components in a rail vehicle dynamics context. Vehicle System Dynamics, 49(7):1021–1072, 2011. doi: 10.1080/00423114.2011.586430.
[13] H. Ye, J. Zeng, Q. Wang, and X. Han. Study on carbody flexible vibration considering layout of underneath equipment and doors. In Proceedings of 4th International Conference on Sensors, Measurement and Intelligent Materials (ICSMIM 2015), pages 1177–1183, Shenzhen, China, 27-28 Dec. 2015. Atlanitis Press, 2016. doi : 10.2991/icsmim-15.2016.217.
[14] K. Wang, H. Xia, M. Xu, and W. Guo. Dynamic analysis of train-bridge interaction system with flexible car-body. Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology, 29(9):3571–3580, 2015. doi: 10.1007/s12206-015-0801-y.
[15] C 116: Interaction between vehicles and track, RP 1, Power spectral density of track irregulari- ties, Part 1: Definitions, conventions and available data, 1971.
[16] I. Sebeşan and T. Mazilu. Vibrations of the railway vehicles. MatrixRom, Bucharest, 2010. (in Romanian).
[17] J. Zhou and S. Wenjing. Analysis on geometric filtering phenomenon and flexible car body resonant, vibration of railway vehicles. Journal of Tongji University, Natural Science, 37(12):1653–1657, 2009.
[18] D. Gong, Y.J. Gu, and J.S. Zhou. Study on geometry filtering phenomenon and flexible car body resonant vibration of articulated trains. In Advanced Materials Researches, Engineering and Manufacturing Technologies in Industry, volume 787 of Advanced Materials Research, pages 542–547. Trans Tech Publications, Nov. 2013. doi: 10.4028/www.scientific.net/AMR.787.542.
[19] F. Cheli and R. Corradi. On rail vehicle vibrations induced by track unevenness: Analysis of the excitation mechanism. Journal of Sound and Vibration, 330(15):3744–3765, 2011. doi: 10.1016/j.jsv.2011.02.025.
[20] M. Dumitriu. Geometric filtering effect of vertical vibrations of railway vehicles. Analele Universităţii “Eftimie Murgu” Resiţa, (1):48–61, 2012.
[21] M. Dumitriu. Considerations on the geometric filtering effect of the bounce and pitch movements in railway vehicles. Annals of the Faculty of Engineering Hunedoara, 12(3):155–164, 2014.
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Authors and Affiliations

Mădălina Dumitriu
1
Cătălin Cruceanu
1

  1. Department of Railway Vehicles, University Politehnica of Bucharest, Romania

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