Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
773972 | Engineering Failure Analysis | 2013 | 12 Pages |
The safety assessment of railway axles is based on a two-stage approach: fatigue strength design and regular inspections which, in terms of a general safety philosophy refer to safe-life and damage tolerance concepts. Starting with a recent failure case, a broken axle of a German high speed train, a discussion is presented on issues of both safety levels. These include ideas for finite life design, the treatment of in-service effects on the fatigue strength due to flying ballast damage and corrosion pits, the effect of corrosion on fatigue crack initiation and propagation, potential effects of non-metallic inclusions in steels, the way to detect them by quality control measures and reliability aspects of non-destructive testing with respect to the detection of fatigue cracks. Proposals are made how the safety level could be further improved.
► Overview on safety assessment aspects of railway axles. ► Discussion on basic safety (fatigue strength) and inspections (fracture mechanics). ► Proposals for further improvement of railway axle safety.