With more people getting on track for sustainable high-speed rail, reducing noise pollution and sophisticated traffic management will boost adoption.
The whistle coming down the tracks is the sound of Europeโs rail renaissance. Coming round the bend is increased adoption of high-speed rail transportation which promises to reduce road traffic and to curb harmful emissions. Cars are major culprits in air pollution, accounting for 14.5% of Europeโs total carbon emissions. Around half the flights in Europe are short haul journeys of less than 1 500km which generates manyย more emissions than the equivalent journey by rail.
The European Green Deal policy features plans to double high-speed rail by 2030 and triple it by 2050. At the moment, 75% of freight is moved by road, so movement of goods by rail is set to double by 2050.
Making trains more competitive with road and air travel means market reform and improvements to the passenger experience as well as infrastructural upgrades. Prioritising sustainable rail transport promises significant benefits but unfortunately, it comes with unseen dangers of its own and not just for passengers.
Low frequency
One of the lesser-known hazards of rail transport is the kind of noise pollution nobody can hear. Inaudible, low frequency ground vibrations emanate from the rolling stock on the railway as it passes. As well as affecting the structural integrity of nearby infrastructure, these vibrations can have a detrimental effect on peopleโs health, causing headaches, fatigue and even irritability in people experiencing them.
โRight now, it is possible to reduce vibrations by putting rubber pads under the tracks,โ said Giovanni Capellari, co-founder ofย Phononic Vibes. โThat system is okay for new railways because you can put them in during construction.โ His company specialises in noise and vibration technology. For an existing railway line, rubber pads are very expensive because you have to remove the tracks to install them, according to Capellari.
Theย BioMetaRail projectย is researching and developing special submerged barriers that can be deployed alongside the track to absorb the vibrations. The barrier walls rely on their shape for their noise reduction performance, rather than the properties of the material.
Known as metamaterials, these synthetic composite materials have designer properties not found in nature. Their internal structures are engineered to interact with the low frequency sound waves of a passing train to trap and insulate against them.
โBasically, the idea is that we use shapes that have some resonant effects at frequencies that are typical for vibrations in the railway sector,โ Capellari said. In this context, the frequency of vibrations is typically between 30 and 60 Hertz. The result is a design for a two-by-three metre concrete structure that resembles a large window.
This โworks for very low frequencies, which is very good for railway trains.โ Additionally, the โwindow panesโ could be divided into even smaller sizes to trap a wider range of frequencies.
Distinctive design
If the panels did not have their distinctive shape and design and were simply slabs of concrete, they would not be able to halt the trainโs ground-borne vibrations as effectively as BioMetaRailโs barriers. For ease of installation, there is no need to lift the railway line as these panels can be inserted into the ground alongside the track like a sunken fence, to protect clusters of homes or buildings.
The research team is also investigating the ideal material, thickness and sizes of the barriers for their vibration damping effects.
Capellariโs BioMetaRail project is an offshoot of theย BOHEME project, which stands for Bio-Inspired Hierarchical MetaMaterials. BOHEME investigates and develops different types of mechanical metamaterials inspired by principles found in nature.
From spider webs to shell whorls, BOHEME characterises natural systems and studies their possible applications. โThe goal is to take the results from BOHEME and try to understand the best geometry (for the rail barriers) considering the market, the cost, production and installation,โ said Capellari.
โThe next step is to go to market,โ he said, as well as obtain certification for the vibration-blocking intervention. โThereโs no such kind of system in the market right now.โ
Ultimately, these panels will be lining the ground alongside the track in residential areas, allowing rail networks to significantly boost their train traffic without adversely affecting the people and buildings nearby.
In 2021, it wasย proposed to increase speed limitsย on Trans-European Transport Network trains to 160km/h or more by 2040. Increasing rail traffic also makes it vital that network operators are able to monitor the entire length of their railroads in real time. Acoustic monitoring can help achieve both these goals.
Richard Aaroeโsย Next Generation Rail Technologiesย has developed a passive listening device that can provide railroad operators with an early warning about obstructions on the track. It can even predict what the obstruction most likely is, and where it might be found. Theย SAFETRACK projectย is working on a standalone system to โgive accurate real-time warning of anything that happens on the infrastructure,โ Aaroe said.
The system comprises sensors, which pick up vibrations on the track, and software that identifies where on the track the sound originates and what could have caused it.
Sophisticated microphone
โIn a way, it is a very, very sophisticated microphone,โ Aaroe explained. The acoustic vibrations on the track that are picked up by the sensors have a โunique fingerprintโ. The sound of a tree branch falling on the track is distinct from a mudslide, for example. Aaroeโs company has built up a โlibraryโ of these railway acoustic fingerprints.
He compares the technology to when submarines use sonar to detect surface ships by picking up its acoustic signature. โToday, that technology has evolved so that you can not only pick up that there is a vessel passing, but you can pick up the type of engine, the class of the vessel itself, the speed, direction, and so on,โ Aaroe said.
The same principles apply with rail acoustics. โEvery incident has a uniqueness and we have identified that and then we can report this to either the train controller, operator or even the driver themselves.โ
The sensors are relatively small, about the size of a smartphone.ย An installation includes four sensors, one on each rail of the track and then another two 10 metres further along the track. Because sound travels through solid rails much better than through air, one sensor package can detect acoustic vibrations five kilometres in each direction.
The technology is currently being trialled by national rail networks in the UK, Germany and Spain, and it will soon be deployed in another three countries, according to Aaroe.
The European Union is committed to growing its rail transportation as part ofย the European Green Dealย which aims to make Europe the first carbon-neutral continent by 2050. As more people opt for rail over cars, technology that makes trains safer and quieter will increasingly be important.
The research in this article was funded by the EU. This article was originally publishedโฏin Horizon, the EU Research and Innovation Magazine.โฏย
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