The present invention concerns a method and a communication system for safe route control according to the pre-characterising clause of claims 1 and 8.
Said safe route control is aimed at, in particular, public transport vehicles moving along a route such as a railway transport unit, an underground train, a tramway, a trolley bus, a bus, etc. The invention is equally suited to a type of vehicle for which guidance can be performed in a completely autonomous manner by a driver in the vehicle. This is the case, for example, for a vehicle managed by an automatic guidance system on a route equipped with an automatic guidance control (rail transport) interfaced with signalling such as the standard CBTC (=Communication-Based Train Control) type. By extension however, without restriction to this type of vehicle, the term “train” could be commonly used in the remainder of the document, without omitting, however, all of the types of vehicles listed above.
Classically in railway transport signalling, a safe control logic for the emergency destruction of a route allows for, outside nominal operating modes, the destruction of a route whilst preserving the safety of the system. A safe control logic of said train for the emergency destruction of a route enabled [sic] This logic is based on a static definition of parameters required for its correct operation. These parameters are designed to be compatible with the worst case of trains running on an area known as a “maneuvering” area, on which the risk of collisions is to be taken into account, of a switching manoeuvre under the train, and therefore being rendered unable to run.
Currently, a method for the safe control of a route traveled by a vehicle running on an approach area of a maneuvering area is known, for which:
The safety time delay is thus designed to be long, in order that the worse case (collision, derailment) be avoided regardless of the type or characteristics of the approach of the vehicle, even if the latter was inevitably not able to stop at a boundary of the approach area. In other terms, this fixed time delay proves to be significantly long even though the safety technology of trains has improved over the years. This causes trains to stop for long periods and therefore holds up the traffic for an excessive amount of time.
The principle of the aforementioned control logic is thus based on classic signalling for which the safety of the manual “destruction” of a route (maneuvering area to be destroyed to prevent it from being crossed) rests on the safety time delay and possibly on a signal confirming the presence of a train on the approach area associated with a stop signal (red traffic lights, motor circuit breaker, etc.). The route is destroyed following a possible sequence according to which:
1—upon the receipt of a (remote) controlled route destruction request originating from the control unit on the ground, the stop signal on the ground is closed;
2—the safety time delay is initialised and the route (maneuvering area) is destroyed after the former has elapsed.
The principle of this logic is that upon the closure of the stop signal, the driver or an on-board automatic guidance control on approach of this signal must activate the braking system to stop the train and do its best to respect the signal.
At the end of the safety time delay, there are two possible scenarios:
1—The train successfully stopped before the signal and can no longer cross the signal (closed signal respected). The destruction of the route (maneuvering area) can therefore be carried out in complete safety.
2—The train was not able to stop upstream of the signal but it is therefore protected from a collision or a derailment on the maneuvering area, either by triggering a switch which locks the latter and prevents any other train from travelling the same maneuvering area, or because the train has crossed the entire maneuvering area and it is no longer affected by the destruction of the route.
Calculation of the safety time delay guarantees that a train approaching the signal which is closing in front of the former will be stopped after said time delay has elapsed. This calculation, in order to guarantee the safety of the function, will take into account the longest stopping time of the different types of train running on this area at the maximum authorised speed (the time depends on the maximum potential and kinetic energy of an approaching train and of its braking capacity).
For these reasons, one of the aims of the present invention is therefore to reduce the time required for the emergency destruction of the route in the maneuvering area whilst guaranteeing safety.
One advantageous solution in the form of the method and in the form of the system is thus proposed through independent claims 1 and 8.
More specifically, a method for the safe control of a route traveled by a vehicle running on an approach area of a maneuvering area is proposed, for which:
An embodiment of the invention thus described therefore anticipates that following manual emergency control of the destruction of the route issued from a closing signal or from a control unit on the ground, the dynamic parameters of the train are taken into account, or even also transmitted between the train and the ground, in particular, the parameters related to the determination of a physical stopping distance which are encoded using binary code (in the required information) in order to be able to compare it to an acceptable stopping distance or a binary decision module (at the level of the control unit on the ground). If the binary coded distance is less than the acceptable distance, the safety time delay can even be cancelled completely.
Thus linear coding can therefore be equally envisaged so as to transmit more gradual signals like metric distances resulting in, in any case, the evaluation of whether the initial safe time delay can be decreased or even cancelled. This aspect thus allows for the fine adjustment of the safety time delay with the intention of reducing it.
The coding can also be made more safe (for example by means of calculating the stopping distance with redundancy) and encrypted in order to protect more securely the exchange of information between the train and the ground and therefore to avoid a reduction in the safety time delay in case the information related to the energy balance was calculated incorrectly or transmitted by mistake or even augurs unfavourably.
A group of sub-claims also presents the advantages of the invention.
In order to describe the invention, in particular its numerous technical aspects and their advantages, some exemplary embodiments and applications are provided using the figures described:
Structurally,
The control unit on the ground USOL is then waiting for information feedback (required information RI) following the request for information RI which was initiated previously.
Several scenarios can therefore be envisaged:
1st scenario: the train A responds “positively”.
Upon receipt of the request for information RI, a safety computer linked to a safety control unit USEMB on-board the train A, due to its position, assesses its energy and compares it to its braking capacity.
If the train A has the ability to stop on the approach area ZA without crossing the maneuvering area ZM, the safety computer responds positively to the control unit on the ground USOL by sending the required information IR, in other words for example, a binary 0-1 type message which may be accompanied by its operating domain and authorising or not the reduction or even cancellation of the safety time delay TS.
Upon receipt of the required information IR, the control unit on the ground USOL checks the 0/1 binary signal, and checks that the operating domain corresponds correctly to the route to be destroyed and that the train A completely guarantees that the stop signal is respected F. Thus, according to the invention, the control unit on the ground USOL therefore authorises the route destruction device D to destroy the route immediately (safety time delay TS not taken into account).
The operator F is therefore informed of the destruction of the route via a signal RES emitted by the control unit on the ground USOL.
The exchange of the request for information RI and of the required information IR between the control unit on the ground USOL and the on-board safety control unit USEMB is achieved ideally by aerial communication E, for example via radiofrequency.
2nd scenario the train A responds “negatively” to the request or does not respond at all (fault relating to the train or train not equipped with an automatism or an adapted on-board safety control unit USEMB):
The route destruction device D waits for the end of the safety time delay TS (maximum by default) to physically destroy the route (=displacement on the maneuvering area ZM).
The operator F is informed of the destruction of the route via the signal RES.
The exchanges of the request for information RI and of the required information IR such as in
In this example, the role of the automatism H_CBTC is that of train driver thus knowing all the dynamic parameters of the train and may also have data available originating from any information source relating to traffic over various areas, to signalling, etc. This is therefore highly advantageous in the case of dynamic traffic management for vehicles without a driver, in particular allowing for more strictly controlled operating areas.
Such as in
The control unit on the ground USOL immediately closes the stop signal F associated with the route, triggers the manual destruction device for the route via the destruction signal D (the safety time delay TS is initialised at its maximum value) and sends the current route destruction signal to the automated equipment H_CBTC on the ground via the extensive signal D_CBTC in order to be able to send the request for information RI to the on-board safety control unit USEMB.
The driver, if present, or the on-board safety control unit USEMB takes immediate steps to stop the train A.
The automatism H_CBTC on the ground therefore identifies the train A approaching the stop signal F and, by means of a ground/train link, sends the request for information RI which comprises a request to stop the train A.
The automated equipment H_CBTC on the ground then sets about waiting for a response IR to the request for information RI:
1st scenario: the train A responds “positively”.
Upon receipt of the request for information RI, the safety control unit (also compatibly automated depending on the CBTC type) USEMB on-board the train A, from its location assesses its energy and compares it to its braking capacity. If the train A has the ability to stop, the on-board safety control unit USEMB responds positively to the automated equipment H_CBTC by sending the required information IR back to it, in other words, for example a binary 0-1 type message may be accompanied by its operating domain and may authorise or inhibit the reduction or even cancellation of the safety time delay TS.
Upon receipt of the message, the automated equipment H_CBTC on the ground verifies that the operating domain corresponds correctly to the route to be destroyed and that the train A ensures that stop signal F is indeed respected.
The automated equipment H_CBTC on the ground informs the control unit on the ground USOL whether the signal F has been respected (or not) by the approaching train A by means of a binary destruction signal DI.
Depending on the permissive status of the binary destruction signal DI, the control unit on the ground USOL thus authorises the route destruction device D to destroy the route immediately (cancellation of the safety time delay TS not taken into account).
The operator F is informed of the destruction of the route by the control unit on the ground USOL.
2nd scenario the train A responds “negatively” to the request for information RI or does not respond at all (fault related to the train or train not equipped with an automatism or adapted on-board safety control unit USEMB).
The control unit on the ground USOL, in standby mode, waits, if necessary, until the end of the safety time delay TS to destroy the route. Thus, there may be no risk remaining of reducing the safety time delay TS “prematurely”.
The operator F is then informed of the non-destruction of the route by the control unit on the ground USOL.
The two communication systems according to
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR08/01025 | 7/14/2008 | WO | 00 | 1/13/2011 |