Mechanical properties and fatigue resistance of rails welded with the aluminothermic method

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
J. M. Duart J. O. García J. I. Verdeja J. P. Sancho
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
9
File Size:
9042 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2007

Abstract

Following a short review of the history of rails used in the transport of passengers and goods, this paper describes the process for rail fabrication, rail structure, and properties, and summarizes the fatigue test curves carried out on rails used today. Also reported is the process for “continuous rail” production using aluminothermic welding via the introduction of weld metal in onsite casting, as a homogeneous melt. Weld characteristics of aluminothermic welding using different preheating procedures—fusion zone, heat-affected zone, microstructure, hardness, slow bend test, and fatigue test resistance (Wöhler curves)—are related to preheating and welding procedures of 700, 900, and 1,100 MPA rail grades. The Locati method is preferred over the staircase method for ascertaining the fatigue limit due to its simplicity. Macrographic and metallographic inspection of broken specimens reveals the reliability of welding techniques and the good metallurgical quality of welds.
Citation

APA: J. M. Duart J. O. García J. I. Verdeja J. P. Sancho  (2007)  Mechanical properties and fatigue resistance of rails welded with the aluminothermic method

MLA: J. M. Duart J. O. García J. I. Verdeja J. P. Sancho Mechanical properties and fatigue resistance of rails welded with the aluminothermic method. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2007.

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