The present invention relates to a technology with which a defect on a rail used for vehicles such as railway cars is checked.
For instance, since a load of a railway car is applied to a rail (referred to as “railway rail” hereinafter) on which the railway car is running, it is necessary to check at regular intervals whether there is a defect (mechanical flaw) produced.
To carry out such a checking operation, there is a flaw checking method in which an ultrasonic probe is used. However there are various problems with this flaw checking method. First of all, measurements are being carried out while water is sprayed on the railway rail, the flaw checking cannot be performed for a long time due to a limitation of a water tank volume. Secondly, since the ultrasonic probe is in the vicinity of (or almost in contact with) the railway rail while the flaw checking is under way, there is a limit to the checking speed (maximum speed is approximately 40 km/h) even when a rail flaw checking car is used. Thirdly this flaw checking method is suited for detection of an inner flaw but not for a surface flaw.
There is a modified flaw checking method disclosed in the Patent document 1. According to this modified flaw checking method, while an alternating current magnetic field generated from an excited coil is being applied to a railway rail to generate an eddy current, a flaw of the railway rail is detected based on an amplitude change of a varying induced voltage that is induced by the eddy current and detected through a couple of detection coils disposed on both sides of the magnetically exciting coil the railway rail.
Patent Document 1: JP2014-102197A
However, there is a following problem with the method disclosed in Patent Document When a railway rail is checked with a rail flaw checking car according to this method, a distance between each detection coil and a railway rail changes due to (vertical) vibration of the rail flaw checking car. There is a noise on the varying induced voltage, which is as big as in the order of a square of the change amount of the distance. As a result, it is hardly possible to perform the checking with a high SN ratio (Signal-Noise ratio).
The objective of the present invention is to enable checking on the defect of the railway rail at a higher SN ratio.
In order to achieve the objective, the present invention provides a rail check device to generate check data with respect to defects of a rail for vehicles. This rail check device has a feature of comprising a first oscillation coil and a second oscillation coil, which are disposed on a face opposite the rail that is a checked object and generate magnetic fields whose directions are opposite to each other and a receiving coil which is disposed between or in the vicinity of the first oscillation coil and the second oscillation coil and configured to output a magnetic field waveform as check data based on the magnetic fields received from the first oscillation coil and the second oscillation coil. Other features are explained below.
The present invention enables checking a rail for vehicles with a high S/N ratio.
Hereinafter, embodiments to practice the present invention (referred to as “embodiments” hereinafter) are explained in detail, referring to attached figures.
Firstly, referring to
As shown in
The oscillation coil (1) and the oscillation coil (2) are configured to generate alternating current magnetic fields whose directions are opposite to each other.
The receiving coil is disposed between the oscillation coil (1) and the oscillation coil (2) and outputs a magnetic field waveform according to magnetic fields received from the oscillation coil (1) and the oscillation coil (2).
Magnetic field lines B1, B2, B3 generated from the oscillation coil (1) run through the checked object M, leak out of the object M and come back through the oscillation coil (1). Sizes of the magnetic field lines coming back through the oscillation coil (1) are dependent on the cross section and the height h (distance from the checked object M to the oscillation coil (1)) of the checked object M. In addition, the closer a point is to the oscillation coil (1), the stronger the magnetic field at the point. Therefore, the magnetic field lines have a magnitude relation of their magnetic fields of B3<B2<B1.
Similarly, magnetic field lines B11, B12, B13 generated from the oscillation coil (2) run through the checked object M, leak out of the checked object M and come back through the oscillation coil (2). In addition, the magnetic field lines B11, B12, B13 have a magnitude relation of their magnetic fields of B13<B12<B11.
In
In this case, looking to positions between the oscillation coil (1) and the receiving coil, the magnetic field line B1 and the magnetic field line B13 offset each other and the magnetic field line B1 is stronger at the positions. Accordingly there remains a magnetic field line directed upward (B1+B13>0).
Then looking to positions between the oscillation coil (2) and the receiving coil, the magnetic field line B3 and the magnetic field line B11 offset each other and the magnetic field line B11 is stronger at the positions. Accordingly there remains a magnetic field line directed downward (B3+B11<0).
In addition, looking to the receiving coil, the magnetic field line B2 and the magnetic field line B12, which are as strong as each other, offset each other. Accordingly, there remains no magnetic field line (B2+B12=0) in the receiving coil, which indicates that if the checked object M has no defect there is no electrical current flowing through the receiving coil.
Next, referring to
As shown in
Next as shown in
Then, as shown in
In these cases, the relation between the interlinkage flux through the receiving coil and the position at which the flaw exists (reference point is set to the center of the receiving coil) is approximately shown in
Therefore it is possible to identify the position of the defect on the checked object M based on how the current outputted from the receiving coil (magnetic field waveform) changes over time. That is, if the checked object M has a defect, the magnetic field waveform outputted from the receiving coil changes greatly (for example, see
If the magnitudes of the magnetic fields generated from the oscillation coil (1) and the oscillation coil (2) are equal to each other, the interlinkage flux Φ through the receiving coil is not 0 even for the checked object M without a defect (no flaw is included) when the receiving coil is offset in the direction of either of the oscillation coil (1) and the oscillation coil (2) from the center between the oscillation coil (1) and the oscillation coil (2). However, even when the receiving coil is offset toward either of the oscillation coil (1) and the oscillation coil (2) from the center between the oscillation coil (1) and the oscillation coil (2), it is possible to adjust the magnetic flux through the receiving coil to 0 (Φ=0) by modifying the alternating current magnetic field generated by one of the oscillation coil (1) and the oscillation coil (2) to be stronger than the alternating current magnetic field generated by the other, as long as the offset magnetic flux is so small as to get the magnetic flux through the receiving coil adjusted to 0 by amplifying or processing of the oscillation coils. Accordingly, the receiving coil does not necessarily have to be disposed at the exact center between the oscillation coil (1) and the oscillation coil (2) and may be disposed in the vicinity of the center between the oscillation coil (1) and the oscillation coil (2). When the offset of the receiving coil from the center between the oscillation coil (1) and the oscillation coil (2) is sufficiently small, it is possible to obtain usable check data with the magnitudes of the alternating current magnetic fields generated from the oscillation coil (1) and the oscillation current (2) being kept equal to each other (magnetic flux Φ16 0).
In
Next is explained how a detection device inclusive of the three coils is disposed at a position opposite the upper face of the railway rail. For example, a detection device 2 (rail check device) inclusive of the three coils is disposed opposite the upper face of the railway rail RR as shown in
When the rail flaw checking car is running along the railway rail RR, check data for the defect is obtained according to the change in the magnetic waveform outputted from the receiving coil at a position where there is a flaw.
Next is explained a whole configuration of the rail check system of the present embodiment. As shown in
The detection device 2 is a device for obtaining check data for a defect of the railway rail RR, comprises a sensor section 21 and an amplification and filtering section 22 and is, for example, secured on the bottom of the rail flaw checking car and on the outer side of the rail flaw checking car.
The sensor section 21 comprises a oscillation coil (1) 211 and an oscillation coil (2) 211 which are disposed on a plane opposite the railway rail RR, aligned along the direction in which the railway rail extends and generate alternating current magnetic fields whose directions are opposite to each other, and a receiving coil which is disposed between or in the vicinity of the oscillation coil (1) 211 and the oscillation coil (2) 211 and outputs a magnetic waveform as the check data based on the magnetic fields from the oscillation coil (1) 211 and the oscillation coil (2) 211 (See
The oscillation coils (1) 211, (2)211 correspond respectively to the oscillation coil (1) and the oscillation coil (2) which are shown in
The amplification and filtering section 22 is configured to amplify and filter a signal received from the receiving coil and transmit the amplified and filtered signal to a signal detection section 34.
The signal processing device 3 comprises an amplification section 31, a digital/analogue conversion section 32, an oscillation section 33, a signal detection section 34, an analogue/digital conversion section 35, a memory section 36, a data communication section 37, a power source section 38 and an evaluation device 4 and installed, for example, in the rail flaw checking car.
The oscillation section 33 is configured to transmit digital oscillation signals at a predetermined frequency (for example, 20 kHz).
The digital/analogue conversion section 32 is configured to convert the digital oscillation signal received from the oscillation section 33 to an analogue alternating current.
The amplification section 31 is configured to amplify the alternating current received from the digital/analogue conversion section 32 and have the amplified alternating current flow through the oscillation coils (1), (2).
The oscillation coils (1), (2), through both of which the alternating currents flow, generate magnetic fields whose directions are opposite to each other. One way to have the oscillation coils (1), (2) generate the magnetic fields whose directions are opposite to each other is to have the oscillation coils (1), (2) wound in opposite directions to each other.
Output signals (magnetic field waveform) outputted from the receiving coil in accordance with the magnetic fields generated by the oscillation coils (1), (2) and coming into the receiving coil are amplified and filtered through the amplification and filtering section 22 and inputted to the signal detection section 34.
The signal detection section 34 is configured to perform a full-wave rectification process and a filtering process (mainly low-pass filter process) using a reference signal received from the oscillation section 33.
The analogue/digital conversion section 35 converts the analogue signal received from the signal detection section 34 to a digital signal.
Data (digital signal) after the conversion by the analogue/digital conversion section 35 is stored on the memory section 36 and outputted from the data communication section 37 to the evaluation device 4.
The power source 38 supplies power to each section in the rail check system 1.
Next is explained the evaluation device 4. The evaluation device 4 is a computer device to perform a checking process to locate a defect on the railway rail based on the check data received from the detection device 2. The evaluation device 4 comprises a data input section 41, a control section 42, a data processing section 43, an output process section 44, an input operation section 45, a display section 46 and a storage section 47. In this embodiment, check data indicate data dealt with at any stage between the receiving coil of the detection device 2 and the data input section 41 of the evaluation device 4.
The output signal (check data) from the data communication section 37 is inputted at the data input section 41.
The control section 42 comprises CPU (Central Processing Unit), RAM (Random Access Memory) and ROM (Read Only Memory) and is configured to control such operations as data transfer and arithmetic operation.
The data processing section 43 is configured to perform the check operation (to be explained below) based on the output signal (check data). Information such as check results is stored in the storage section 47 when needed.
The output process section 44 is configured to perform operation to display on the display section 46 such data as check results in a display form with which it is easy to visually understand the displayed data, using graphs and tables appropriately.
The input operation section 45 is such information input means as a keyboard or mouse.
The display section 46 is such a display to display check results or the like as LCD (Liquid Crystal Display) and CRT (Cathode Ray Tube).
The storage section 47 is a section on which data after processed by the data processing section 43 and the like is stored.
Both the data processing section 43 and the output process section 44 are configured to perform their functions by loading a program and data to the control section 42 and have the control section 42 perform an arithmetic operation.
Next is explained the check operation by the data processing section 43 of the evaluation device 4, referring to
To begin with, the data processing section 43 obtains check data from the storage section 47 (Step S1). In this step may be performed an offset control process, in which a signal of the offset explained above and included in the check data is lowered.
Next, the data processing section 43 performs the following steps S3 to S5 over each of the predetermined time spans such as 0.5 ms-100 ms (Step S2˜Step S6).
The data processing section 43 is configured to determine whether there is a waveform value out of the reference range in the check data over each of the predetermined time spans (Step S3). As a result of this determination, if there is no waveform value out of the reference range (No), the data processing section 43 determines that no defect exists (Step S4). On the other hand, if there is a waveform value out of the reference range, the data processing section 43 determines that there exists a defect (Step S5).
When the processes of Steps S3 to S6 are finished for all the check data, the data processing section 43 displays the result of the check data on the display section 46.
Next, referring to
The rail check system 1a comprises a sensing device 2a that is attached on the bottom of and outside the flaw checking car. The sensing device 2a includes as many as N sensor sections 21 (1˜N channel). As a result, the sensing device 2a further includes as many amplification and filtering sections 22 as N and the processing device 3 includes N amplification sections 31 and N signal detection sections 34.
The digital/analogue conversion section 32 is configured to convert the digital oscillation signal received from the oscillation section 33 to an analogue alternating current and transmit the alternating current to each of the N amplification sections 31.
Each of the N amplification sections 31 transmits a magnetic excitation signal (alternating current) for each channel to its corresponding oscillation coils (1), (2).211.
Each receiving coil 212 transmits a detection signal for each channel (output signal (magnetic field waveform) to its corresponding signal detection section 34 through the amplification and filtering section 22.
The analogue/digital conversion section 35 receives from each signal detection section 34 a measured signal (analogue signal) for the corresponding channel, converts the measured signal to collected data (digital signal) for the corresponding channel and transmits the collected signal to the storage section 36 where the collected data is stored.
The evaluation device 4 performs the check process to locate a defect of the railway rail (as described in
Since the rail check system 1a has plural sensor sections 21 (multi cannels), it can detect a defect of the railway rail with higher accuracy. Hereinafter a specific configuration is explained in detail.
As shown in
The sensor section 21a is disposed in parallel with the longitudinal direction of the railway rail RR.
The sensor section 21b is disposed in a direction that is orthogonal to the longitudinal direction of the railway rail RR.
The sensor section 21c is disposed in a diagonal direction that makes an angle of 45 degrees to the longitudinal direction of the railway rail RR.
The sensor section 21d is disposed in a diagonal direction that is orthogonal to the sensor section 21c.
As explained above, though the detection device 2a makes use of the sensor sections 21a to 21d whose width is smaller than the width of the railway rail RR, the detection device 2a is capable of detecting with high accuracy a defect of the railway rail that is located at any position in the width direction of the rail way rail RR or is in any shape since it has the plural sensor sections 21a to 21d oriented in different directions that are different from one another as shown in
Next is explained another example of a specific configuration of the detection device. As shown in
According to the detection device 2b indicated in
Technical contents explained below referring to
Referring to
For example, as shown in
For the purpose of locating the flaws, signals resulting from rail joints of the railway rail are utilized. As indicated in
As shown in
Combining the relation between the sensor output S and the measurement time T indicated in
As explained, making use of information on the position in the rail longitudinal direction at which the rail joint is, it is possible to locate a flaw of the railway rail RR in the rail longitudinal direction.
Next is explained a first method to prevent accuracy with which the flaw is detected from lowering due to vibration of the rail flaw checking car that is running, referring to
As is shown in
As shown in
However, since there is the (vertical) vibration, the offset included in the sensor output S changes as indicated in
If a comparison is made between the signal X and the signal R (equal to a square root of (X2+y2)), there is a difference in the waveform shape for a flaw between these signals while there is no difference in the waveform shape for the other portions than the flaw between these signals. Making use of this property, it is possible to identify a signal for a flaw in the sensor output S, which is explained in detail below.
As is indicated in
A signal Y corresponds to a sin component of the input signal (output signal of the receiving coil), whose phase is shifted from the magnetic field by 90 degrees. Specifically, a phase comparison unit 343 receives the output of the receiving coil and 90 degrees phase information from the component division unit 341 that receives the oscillation output and outputs the sine component of the receiving coil. The output of the phase comparison unit 343 passes through the low-pass filter circuit 345 and is inputted as the signal Y to the arithmetic operation circuit 346.
The signal R (equal to a square root of (X2+y2)) corresponds to an amplitude value of the output of the receiving coil and is generated by the arithmetic operation circuit 346 to which the signals X, Y are inputted. The signal R generated by the arithmetic operation circuit 346 is inputted to the gain adjustment unit 52.
As is understood by making a comparison between a graph of the signal X shown in
Next is explained a second method to prevent accuracy with which the flaw is detected from lowering due to (vertical) vibration while the rail flaw checking car is running.
The signal Θ indicates a phase difference of the inputted signal from the reference signal (outputted from the oscillation section 33 in
As is understood from a comparison between a graph of the signal X shown in
Next, referring to
As shown in
As shown in
As has been explained, using different sensor sections whose distances between coils differ from one another enables detecting flaws on the surface of and in the rail and determining whether the detected flaw is on the rail or in the rail.
Next, referring to
As explained above, the flaw detection device 2 (2a, 2b) utilizes the sensor section 21 inclusive of the oscillation coil (1), the receiving coil and the oscillation coil (2) which are arranged in this order on a plane opposite the rail to be checked, generates from the oscillation coils (1), (2) alternating current magnetic fields whose directions are opposite to each other and is capable of detecting a defect on and in the rail used for the vehicle with a high SN ratio by outputting the magnetic field waveform as check data from the receiving coil
In addition, a portion at which a defect is in a railway rail RR can be determined by the evaluation device 4 performing the check process based on the check data received from the detection device 2.
Moreover, other configurations and effects of the present embodiment have been explained.
The explanation on the present embodiment is finished and the scope of the present embodiment is not limited to what have been explained.
For example, the diagonal angle of the sensor section 21c relative to the longitudinal direction of the railway rail RR, which is shown in
Furthermore, the specific configuration of the present invention may be altered within the scope of the present invention.
1, 1a Rail Check System
2, 2a, 2b Detection Device (Rail Check Device)
3 Processing Device
4 Evaluation Device
21, 21a, 21b, 21c, 21d Sensor Section
22 Amplification/Filtering Section
31 Amplification Section
32 Digital/Analogue Conversion section
33 Oscillation Section
34 Signal Detection Section
35 Analogue/Digital Section
36 Memory Section
37 Data Communication Section
38 Power Source
41 Data Input Section
42 Control Section
43 Data Processing Section
44 Output Process Section
45 Operation Input Section
46 Display Section
47 Storage Section
211 Oscillation Coil (1), (2)
212 Receiving Coil
M Checked Object
RR Railway Rail
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2015-137823 | Jul 2015 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/JP2016/057801 | 3/11/2016 | WO | 00 |