Ratcheting and wear behavior of Australian rail steel: Experimental investigation of material properties and sampling method

Asitha C. Athukorala, Dennis V. De Pellegrin, Kyriakos I. Kourousis

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

Abstract

To The ratcheting behavior of high-strength rail steel (Australian Standard AS1085.1) is studied in this work for the purpose of predicting wear and damage to the rail surface. Historically, researchers have used circular test coupons obtained from the rail head to conduct cyclic load tests, but according to hardness profile data, considerable variation exists across the rail head section. For example, the induction-hardened rail (AS1085.1) shows high hardness (400-430 HV100) up to four-millimeters into the rail head's surface, but then drops considerably beyond that. Given that cyclic test coupons five millimeters in diameter at the gauge area are usually taken from the rail sample, there is a high probability that the original surface properties of the rail do not apply across the entire test coupon and, therefore, data representing only average material properties are obtained. In the literature, disks (47 mm in diameter) for a twin-disk rolling contact test machine have been obtained directly from the rail sample and used to validate rolling contact fatigue wear models. The question arises: How accurate are such predictions? In this research paper, the effect of rail sampling position on the ratcheting behavior of AS1085.1 rail steel was investigated using rectangular shaped specimens. Uniaxial stress-controlled tests were conducted with samples obtained at four different depths to observe the ratcheting behaviour of each. Micro-hardness measurements of the test coupons were carried out to obtain a constitutive relationship to predict the effect of depth on the ratcheting behaviour of the rail material. This work ultimately assists the selection of valid material parameters for constitutive models in the study of rail surface ratcheting.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the 10th International Conference on Contact Mechanics and Wear of Rail/Wheel Systems
EditorsS Grassie
Publication statusPublished - 2015
Event10th International Conference on Contact Mechanics of Wheel / Rail Systems, CM 2015 - Colorado Springs, United States
Duration: 30 Aug 20153 Sep 2015

Conference

Conference10th International Conference on Contact Mechanics of Wheel / Rail Systems, CM 2015
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityColorado Springs
Period30/08/153/09/15

Keywords

  • Hardness
  • Pearlite
  • Rail steel
  • Ratcheting

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