Experimental Study on the Stability of Railroad Silt Subgrade with Increasing Train Speed

The comfort and safety of a moving train is largely determined by the dynamic response of the railway track and its foundation (i.e., subgrade). To study the dynamic stability of a silt subgrade subjected to train traffic loading with increasing speed, cyclic triaxial tests were conducted for compacted silt specimens with varying dry density, water content, dynamic stress, and load frequency. The laboratory test results and field measurements of the subgrade dynamic stress under train loading indicate that with increasing train speed, an increase in dynamic stress and load frequency does not impair the stability of the silt subgrade, provided the subgrade is in sound physical condition (i.e., its natural water content approximates the optimal water content) and the relative compaction is at least 90%. However, if the relative compaction is 85%, the subgrade is stable only at a dynamic stress level that is below 70 kPa, and the subgrade may suffer shear failure at a higher dynamic stress level. The elastic deformation of the subgrade linearly increases with an increase in train speed. However, if the degree of saturation of the silt subgrade increases, the thresholds of both the dynamic stress and resilient modulus decrease markedly, accompanied by sharp increases in elastic deformation and cumulative deformation and can even result in the shear failure of the subgrade. These conditions are unfavorable for the high speeds and stability needed for trains; therefore, train speeds should be limited in wet conditions to reduce subgrade dynamic stress and load frequency.

[1]  S. Brown,et al.  Repeated load triaxial testing of a silty clay , 1975 .

[2]  C L Monismith,et al.  EFFECTS OF REPEATED LOADING ON THE STRENGTH AND DEFORMATION OF COMPACTED CLAY , 1955 .

[3]  Dingqing Li,et al.  Cumulative plastic deformation for fine-grained subgrade soils , 1996 .

[4]  Dingqing Li,et al.  Resilient modulus for fine-grained subgrade soils , 1994 .

[5]  C R Freeme,et al.  PERMANENT DEFORMATION CHARACTERISTICS OF SUBGRADE SOILS DUE TO REPEATED LOADING , 1975 .

[6]  H. Larew STRENGTH AND DEFORMATION CHARACTERISTICS OF COMPACTED SOILS UNDER THE ACTION OF REPEATED AXIAL LOADS , 1960 .

[7]  Gerald A. Miller,et al.  Cyclic shear strength of soft railroad subgrade , 2000 .

[8]  Han Zi Research on the Countermeasure of Railway Subgrade on Existing Railways , 2002 .

[9]  Zhang Qian-li Dynamic Stress Analysis on Speed-increase Subgrade of Existing Railway , 2005 .

[10]  Eric C. Drumm,et al.  Subgrade Resilient Modulus Correction for Saturation Effects , 1999 .

[11]  Eric C. Drumm,et al.  Weighting Factor for Seasonal Subgrade Resilient Modulus , 1998 .

[12]  Lam Wah Cheung Laboratory assessment of pavement foundation materials , 1994 .

[13]  William D. Kovacs,et al.  Seasonal variation of resilient modulus of subgrade soils , 1994 .

[14]  Louay N. Mohammad,et al.  EFFECT OF MOISTURE CONTENT AND DRY UNIT WEIGHT ON THE RESILIENT MODULUS OF SUBGRADE SOILS PREDICTED BY CONE PENETRATION TEST , 2002 .

[15]  Rw Sparrow,et al.  DESIGN OF CONVENTIONAL RAIL TRACK FOUNDATIONS. , 1972 .