Experimental study on the wear and damage of wheel-rail steels under alternating temperature conditions

被引:15
|
作者
Zhou, L. [1 ]
Hu, Y. [1 ]
Ding, H. H. [1 ]
Liu, Q. Y. [1 ]
Guo, J. [1 ]
Wang, W. J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Southwest Jiaotong Univ, State Key Lab Tract Power, Tribol Res Inst, Chengdu 610031, Sichuan, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Wheel/rail; Alternating temperature; Wear; Debris layer; Rolling contact fatigue; MICROSTRUCTURAL EVOLUTION; ETCHING LAYERS; WHITE; ENVIRONMENT; TRANSITIONS;
D O I
10.1016/j.wear.2021.203829
中图分类号
TH [机械、仪表工业];
学科分类号
0802 ;
摘要
The objective of this study is to investigate the wear and rolling contact fatigue (RCF) damage of wheel and rail materials under alternating temperature conditions. Two series of rolling-sliding tests were performed: (1) at 20 degrees C for 75,000 cycles, and then continued at -40 degrees C for 10,000, 30,000, and 75,000 cycles, respectively; (2) at -40 degrees C for 75,000 cycles, and then continued at 20 degrees C for 10,000, 30,000, and 75,000 cycles, respectively. The results indicated that the decrease in the temperature would alleviate the wheel wear due to the formation of wear debris layer. Both the rising and dropping of the environmental temperature during the tests could lead to the increase in the rail wear. Besides, the decrease in the temperature could increase the plastic deformation and work hardening of wheel and rail discs. In addition, the crack initiation was correlated with the behaviour of plastic flow on the wheel. At 20 degrees C, long single cracks initiated and propagated along the highly deformed ferrite boundaries. At -40 degrees C, white-etching layer (WEL) was observed only on the wheel surface, which was mainly attributed to the severe plastic deformation. Then, the refined ferrites and WELs were the main crack initiation sources on the wheel.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] WEAR CHARACTERISTICS OF WHEEL AND RAIL STEELS
    AKAMA, M
    MATSUYAMA, S
    JOURNAL OF JAPAN SOCIETY OF LUBRICATION ENGINEERS, 1986, 31 (12): : 876 - 882
  • [32] On the temperature in the wheel-rail rolling contact
    Fischer, FD
    Daves, W
    Werner, EA
    FATIGUE & FRACTURE OF ENGINEERING MATERIALS & STRUCTURES, 2003, 26 (10) : 999 - U1
  • [33] The Experimental Determination of the Grease Amount to Effective Wear Reduction in the Wheel-Rail Contact
    Fryza, J.
    Omasta, M.
    LATEST METHODS OF CONSTRUCTION DESIGN, 2016, : 127 - 132
  • [34] Wheel-rail low adhesion issues and its effect on wheel-rail material damage at high speed under different interfacial contaminations
    Wu, Bing
    An, Boyang
    Wen, Zefeng
    Wang, Wenjian
    Wu, Tao
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE INSTITUTION OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS PART C-JOURNAL OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERING SCIENCE, 2019, 233 (15) : 5477 - 5490
  • [35] Study on the failure of oil-contaminated wheel-rail conditions
    Zhou, Gaowei
    Zhou, Jiajun
    Tian, Chun
    Fei, Gao
    PLOS ONE, 2025, 20 (03):
  • [36] Wheel-rail interaction and damage in switches and crossings
    Palsson, Bjorn A.
    Nielsen, Jens C. O.
    VEHICLE SYSTEM DYNAMICS, 2012, 50 (01) : 43 - 58
  • [37] Recent advances in wheel-rail RCF and wear testing
    Shrestha, Sundar
    Spiryagin, Maksym
    Bernal, Esteban
    Wu, Qing
    Cole, Colin
    FRICTION, 2023, 11 (12) : 2181 - 2203
  • [38] An improved degraded adhesion model for wheel-rail under braking conditions
    Zhu, Wenliang
    Zhu, Wenjian
    Zheng, Shubin
    Wu, Na
    INDUSTRIAL LUBRICATION AND TRIBOLOGY, 2021, 73 (03) : 450 - 456
  • [39] Wear and damage behaviors of wheel-rail with different material matchings under various sand deposition densities of rail top in desert environments
    Shu, K.
    Zani, N.
    Ghidini, L.
    Petrogalli, C.
    Yu, L. L.
    Mazzu, A.
    Ding, H. H.
    Wang, W. J.
    WEAR, 2025, 560-561
  • [40] Effect of wheel material characteristics on wear and fatigue property of wheel-rail
    Chen, Shui-You
    Liu, Ji-Hua
    Guo, Jun
    Wang, Wen-Jian
    Liu, Qi-Yue
    Mocaxue Xuebao/Tribology, 2015, 35 (05): : 531 - 537