Applied Sciences (Jun 2022)
Use of Surface Acoustic Waves for Crack Detection on Railway Track Components—Laboratory Tests
Abstract
The present work investigates the technical feasibility of a condition monitoring setup aiming at the detection of gauge corner cracks (aka head checks) in pearlitic railway rails, using a wayside (i.e., stationary) setup with surface acoustic waves (SAW) as its detection principle. The experimental SAW setup consists of a pitch-catch setup using piezo transducers equipped with comb adaptors to excite and measure narrowband Rayleigh waves with a center frequency of 1 MHz. SAW experiments were performed on a rail subjected to cyclic loading in a 1:1 wheel–rail test rig yielding the specific rolling contact fatigue, i.e., head checks. Elastodynamic finite integration technique (EFIT) simulations were performed to analyze the surface and bulk wave propagation in the rail and to predict the signals at specific receiver positions. SAW transmission and reflection scenarios at cracks were analyzed numerically via modelled variations of gauge corner crack configurations according to number of cracks (0–3) and depth (0, 0.5 mm and 1 mm). The numerical and the experimental results each show a clear correlation between the appearance and intensity of head check damage and the wave attenuation in transmission mode.
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