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1.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 19093, 2024 Aug 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39154108

RESUMO

To investigate the vibration isolation effect of composite vibration isolation walls on surface vibrations in suburban railway deep tunnels under various influencing factors, an integrated numerical model of the train was initially developed. This model solved the wheel-rail interaction force and was applied to a three-dimensional volume coupling model of the track soil. Subsequently, the model's reliability was validated through comparison with measured data. Afterward, the vibration isolation effects of various types of EPS material vibration isolation walls were examined, with a focus on exploring the impact of thickness, material proportion, and relative positioning of the materials within the vibration isolation wall composed of EPS material and concrete. Research indicates that with an increase in the burial depth of a single material vibration isolation wall, its effective vibration isolation frequency range gradually widens. When the burial depth of the vibration isolation wall exceeds the tunnel burial depth, the vibration isolation effect is optimal. Composite vibration isolation walls, with thicknesses smaller than single-material vibration isolation walls, exhibit superior vibration isolation effects compared to their single-material counterparts. The effective vibration isolation frequency band of composite vibration isolation walls differs from that of single-material vibration isolation walls. Using the optimal-size vibration isolation wall of a single material as a composite vibration isolation wall enhances the vibration isolation effect of peak acceleration in the frequency domain by 16.58% and peak velocity by 16.95%. Moreover, frequency domain peak displacement experiences a 30.73% improvement in the vibration isolation effect.

2.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 10531, 2024 May 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38719880

RESUMO

This study aims to explore the optimal driving speed for ground vibration in suburban railway underground sections. We focused on the ground surface of suburban railway underground sections and developed a 3D finite element dynamic coupling model for the tunnel-soil system. Subsequently, considering factors such as train speed and passenger load, we analyzed the propagation characteristics of ground vibration responses in urban railway underground sections. The research results indicate a significant amplification phenomenon in the peak power spectrum of measurement points near the tunnels in underground sections. The high-frequency components of the power spectrum between measurement points are noticeably higher between the two tunnels. Furthermore, as the train speed increases, this amplification phenomenon becomes more pronounced, and the power spectrum of each measurement point mainly concentrates on several frequency bands, with the amplitude of the power spectrum near the prominent frequencies also increasing. However, when the train speed is between 100 and 120 km/h, the impact on the amplitude of the power spectrum at measurement points above the running tunnel is minimal. Additionally, the amplitude of the middle-to-high frequency components in the power spectrum increases with the increase in passenger numbers. The impact on the peak acceleration amplitude at each measurement point is minimal when the train speed is 80 km/h or below. However, once the train speed exceeds 80 km/h, the peak acceleration amplitude above the running tunnel rapidly increases, reaching its maximum value at 113 km/h, and then gradually decreasing.

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