Discover 2022

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Getting back on track Rail freight wagons appear sturdy, but uneven distribution of their cargo can literally result in them coming off the rails. Previous research established that this is a prime risk factor for derailments. The industry’s regulator, the Office of Rail and Road (ORR), called for an industry-wide response. A research project commissioned by key players in the rail freight sector formed one part of that response. Dr Phil Shackleton and his team at the University of Huddersfield’s Institute of Railway Research (IRR) were already partners in three EU-funded projects studying freight suspension systems during this time and took on the new research project.

A happy synchronicity Dr Shackleton explains: “The outputs from the EUfunded projects gave us a better understanding of freight suspension behaviour and the factors that influence it. They helped us develop a modelling approach to investigate and measure variation in risk performance.” The Rail Safety and Standards Board (RSSB) funded his team to specifically study the derailment risk caused by “imbalanced loading” on the freight wagons most commonly used on the UK railway. From 2017, the team spent two years running 6,000 computer simulations of load distribution and track conditions. The team applied metrics they had devised previously to existing data and technology, allowing them to assess the risk factors from uneven loads for different types of freight wagon, train or wagon contents.

Targeted solutions As a result, they advised the industry on a range of mitigations. These included a warning that capacity in wagons built for a specific purpose – such as carrying coal – should be reduced when they were re-purposed for other freight, 16 | DISCOVER 2022

Dr Phil Shackleton School of Computing and Engineering

particularly aggregates. The coal wagons left redundant by the closure of coal-powered power stations were shortened in light of the University team’s work, a measure that meant they were better-equipped to cope with their new cargo. That innovation alone is thought to have saved around £175m by allowing for the safe repurposing of coal wagons. The Chair of the Cross-Industry Freight Derailment Prevention Group has said the work has extended the life of around 2500 redundant coal wagons. Repurposing each wagon costs £50,000 – well under half the £120,000 cost of a new aggregates wagon.


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