TY - JOUR
T1 - Influence of a decarburised layer on the formation of microcracks in railway rails
T2 - On-site investigation and twin-disc study
AU - Kanematsu, Yoshikazu
AU - Uehigashi, Naotaka
AU - Matsui, Motohide
AU - Noguchi, Shoji
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2022/9/15
Y1 - 2022/9/15
N2 - In the rail manufacturing process, the rail material is exposed to a high-temperature atmosphere, thereby causing decarburisation. It reduces the carbon content on the surface layer of the rails, which degrades the mechanical properties and hardness of the rails’ surface. Squat, a rail defect, results from rolling contact fatigue (RCF) due to the cyclic contact between a wheel and a rail. Generally, RCF initiates microcracks on the running band of a rail; then, when RCF accumulates, the microcracks grow deep below the surface of the running band and finally the squat is visually formed. This study aims to understand the effect of decarburisation on microcrack formation using twin-disc and site tests. Test pieces with and without decarburisation were compared during the twin-disc tests under the same test conditions. The results show that decarburisation affects the formation of microcracks and plastic flow. Furthermore, we investigated the effect of decarburisation on the formation of microcracks in the test pieces taken from the actual tracks. The comparison between the test pieces with and without a decarburised layer showed that the crack density of the ground rail was ∼2.7–5.7 times higher than that of the underground rail at a cumulative tonnage of 23 MGT.
AB - In the rail manufacturing process, the rail material is exposed to a high-temperature atmosphere, thereby causing decarburisation. It reduces the carbon content on the surface layer of the rails, which degrades the mechanical properties and hardness of the rails’ surface. Squat, a rail defect, results from rolling contact fatigue (RCF) due to the cyclic contact between a wheel and a rail. Generally, RCF initiates microcracks on the running band of a rail; then, when RCF accumulates, the microcracks grow deep below the surface of the running band and finally the squat is visually formed. This study aims to understand the effect of decarburisation on microcrack formation using twin-disc and site tests. Test pieces with and without decarburisation were compared during the twin-disc tests under the same test conditions. The results show that decarburisation affects the formation of microcracks and plastic flow. Furthermore, we investigated the effect of decarburisation on the formation of microcracks in the test pieces taken from the actual tracks. The comparison between the test pieces with and without a decarburised layer showed that the crack density of the ground rail was ∼2.7–5.7 times higher than that of the underground rail at a cumulative tonnage of 23 MGT.
KW - Optical microscopy
KW - Rail-wheel tribology
KW - Rolling contact fatigue
KW - Wear testing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85133482272&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.wear.2022.204427
DO - 10.1016/j.wear.2022.204427
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85133482272
SN - 0043-1648
VL - 504-505
JO - Wear
JF - Wear
M1 - 204427
ER -