压舱物
磁道(磁盘驱动器)
压力(语言学)
有限元法
结构工程
岩土工程
工程类
压缩(物理)
旋转(数学)
轨道几何
三轴剪切试验
地质学
计算机科学
机械工程
材料科学
剪切(地质)
电气工程
哲学
人工智能
复合材料
语言学
岩石学
作者
William Powrie,Yang Liu,C.R.I. Clayton
标识
DOI:10.1243/0954409jrrt95
摘要
The design of railway track formations has traditionally been empirically rather than analytically based, with ballast and sub-ballast layer thicknesses specified mainly on the basis of previous practice. Recent design methods are more scientifically based, and for the most advanced design methods currently in use, input parameters are typically determined from cyclic triaxial testing. The changes in stress experienced by an element of soil below a railway track as a train passes are complex, involving (for example) a cyclic rotation of the principal stress directions. In these conditions, soil element testing in uniaxial compression may lead to the underestimation of vertical strains. Testing in a hollow cylinder apparatus, which can impose the rotations in principal stress direction likely to be experienced by a soil element in the field, may therefore be preferable to triaxial testing. However, there are as yet no data to guide the designer to a rational specification of a testing programme in this more complex apparatus. This article reports the results of finite element analyses carried out to investigate the stress changes experienced by an element of soil beneath a ballasted railway track during train passage. The effects of element location, the initial in situ stress state of the soil, and the elastic parameters used to characterize its behaviour are investigated, and the modelling of the stress paths in a cyclic hollow cylinder apparatus is discussed.
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