4.7 Article

A field study on the aerodynamics of freight trains

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jweia.2020.104463

Keywords

Train aerodynamics; Bluff bodies; Field measurement; Aerodynamic drag; Experimental methods

Funding

  1. Pacific National Rail
  2. Australian Research Council [LP13100953]

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This study assessed the aerodynamic performance of shipping containers loaded on inter-modal freight trains through a full-scale field test. The results showed that in low wind conditions, the drag coefficient was significantly lower for containers located at large downstream distances, suggesting that previous studies have not fully detailed the drag profile of such containers. Additionally, the asymmetry of pressure distribution on the front of the container can be used as a proxy to determine the wind yaw angle at the train.
A novel full-scale field test was undertaken to assess the aerodynamic performance of shipping containers loaded on inter-modal freight trains. The aerodynamic performance of an instrumented 48 ft container, located 185 m downstream of the locomotive, is assessed in the context of surface pressure, weather station, and GPS data sets. Previous studies on the aerodynamics of trains have been largely limited to low-resolution, reduced-order and scaled; field, numerical and wind-tunnel studies; respectively. The objective here was to determine the capacity of this novel field-based method to assess the aerodynamic performance of full-scale train containers for a large range of operating conditions. For low wind conditions, where the yaw angle is predicted to be low, measured surface pressure distributions on the front and base of the container are similar to that of past work however the magnitude of the drag coefficient was much lower, by up to 65%. This suggests that previous studies are yet to fully detail the drag profile of containers located at large downstream distance. Observed asymmetry of the pressure distribution on the front of the container are generally consistent with wind conditions measured at nearby weather stations and can be used as a proxy to determine the wind yaw angle at the train.

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