Unidirectional plastic strain accumulation (ratcheting) is one of the main causes of surface crack nucleation in rails and wheels in dry condition. It is related to frictional forces which develop at the contact interface due to sliding, especially in curve and in braking. Surface cracks generated by ratcheting can subsequently lead to severe damage when environmental fluid contaminants (such as rain or snow) are added at the contact interface, due to the complex solid-fluid interaction, which can enhance crack growth. In dry condition, wear and ratcheting can reach an equilibrium, such that the strain field and the crack depth are stationary. Understanding such steady-state deformation regime can be a key factor for predicting the expecte...
Repeated wheel passes on rail can cause the accumulation of plastic strain in a thin subsurface laye...
A computer model, which simulates the ratcheting wear of a ductile material subject to repeated load...
A subsurface rolling contact fatigue crack in a railway wheel is studied. Stress and strain fields a...
This paper presents a validated model of plastic strain accumulation in railway rail steel under rep...
The paper presents a ratchetting model, based on the non-linear kinematic-isotropic hardening law of...
A model of plastic strain accumulation, wear, and rolling contact fatigue (RCF) crack initiation in ...
Railway rails accumulate severe plastic deformation at the surface as a result of loading by passing...
In finite element (FE) simulations of a twin disc test of a wheel/rail contact, fatigue crack initia...
Plastic flow of near-surface rail material under contact loading is a feature of rail-wheel contact,...
A procedure for wheels and rails material characterization is still an open task in railway industr...
Presented paper deals with ratcheting prediction in the field of contact fatigue for the case of lin...
A better understanding of rail and wheel failure, particularly through wear and rolling contact fati...
Most cyclic plasticity models used in ratcheting simulations employ the rate-independent elastoplast...
Fluid penetration of cracks has been regarded as an important mechanism of crack growth for inclined...
This paper presents a strategy to predict the lifetime of rails subjected to large rolling contact l...
Repeated wheel passes on rail can cause the accumulation of plastic strain in a thin subsurface laye...
A computer model, which simulates the ratcheting wear of a ductile material subject to repeated load...
A subsurface rolling contact fatigue crack in a railway wheel is studied. Stress and strain fields a...
This paper presents a validated model of plastic strain accumulation in railway rail steel under rep...
The paper presents a ratchetting model, based on the non-linear kinematic-isotropic hardening law of...
A model of plastic strain accumulation, wear, and rolling contact fatigue (RCF) crack initiation in ...
Railway rails accumulate severe plastic deformation at the surface as a result of loading by passing...
In finite element (FE) simulations of a twin disc test of a wheel/rail contact, fatigue crack initia...
Plastic flow of near-surface rail material under contact loading is a feature of rail-wheel contact,...
A procedure for wheels and rails material characterization is still an open task in railway industr...
Presented paper deals with ratcheting prediction in the field of contact fatigue for the case of lin...
A better understanding of rail and wheel failure, particularly through wear and rolling contact fati...
Most cyclic plasticity models used in ratcheting simulations employ the rate-independent elastoplast...
Fluid penetration of cracks has been regarded as an important mechanism of crack growth for inclined...
This paper presents a strategy to predict the lifetime of rails subjected to large rolling contact l...
Repeated wheel passes on rail can cause the accumulation of plastic strain in a thin subsurface laye...
A computer model, which simulates the ratcheting wear of a ductile material subject to repeated load...
A subsurface rolling contact fatigue crack in a railway wheel is studied. Stress and strain fields a...