Submitted:
06 December 2024
Posted:
09 December 2024
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Rolling Stock Signalling Interaction
2.1. Rolling Stock
2.2. Signalling Circuits
- poor rolling stock axle resistance (set to 0.25-0.5 Ω values);
- leaking track causing drainage of RX signal, de facto hiding the shunting axle resistance (normal conductance values can be as low as 1−10 mS/km [19], but commonly applied worst cases can be as high as 0.1−0.5 S/km).
2.3. Line Frequency Response
- different line sections can show different frequency responses (shifted resonances of different amplitude);
- anti-resonances are particularly important, as they amplify current components and they depend on train position, so they are variable during a test run [24];
- in particular, positioning RS in front of the TPS maximizes current emissions, as line length is minimized, but amplification due to anti-resonances is missed.
2.4. Emission Limit Masks
3. Testing Methods
3.1. Railway Line and Rolling Stock Operating Conditions
- either the test line is very simple, so to reproduce a clear distribution of the return current (such as a single-track straight line with current flowing back in one direction only),
- or it’s a long line reproducing many relevant cases of resonances and anti-resonances, of close proximity to the TPS, etc., with possible issues of mixed traffic.
3.2. Measurement and Analysis of Pantograph Current
4. Test Cases
4.1. Single Track 25 kV 50 Hz
4.2. 3 kV DC Locomotive on Real Line
4.3. 15 kV AC Locomotive on Real Line
- Amplitude distribution is asymmetric, more compact at the highest levels of emission with a long tail towards very small values, so that dispersion does not transfer straightforwardly to an estimate of uncertainty;
- Repeatability in ACC and BRK is in the order of 3 % for RS emission components with minimum influence of the infrastructure for most of them (so, for the same OP and same or different locations);
- LFR resonances have a significant effect at high frequency, so that above 15 kHz repeatability worsens by an order of magnitude (about 30 %); this is also due to some movement between adjacent frequency bins due to slight fundamental instability.
5. Conclusions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| System | OCs | N°of test runs | σ/μ. | Note |
| 3 kV | ACC | 4 | 3-5 % | Correlated components carefully selected |
| BRK | 4 | 4-7 % | ||
| 25 kV | ACC | 4 | 2-3 % | |
| BRK | 4 | 2-3 % | ||
| 15 kV | ACC | 5 | 1-3 % | |
| BRK | 3 | 1-3 % | Above 15 kHz increase to 30% |
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