The slipstream and wake structure of high-speed trains
thesis
posted on 2017-02-24, 00:12authored byBell, James Robin
This work investigates the slipstream, the airflow induced by a vehicles movement,
of high-speed trains (HSTs). Such flows can be hazardous to waiting commuters at
platforms, track-side workers and infrastructure.
Scaled wind-tunnel and moving-model experimental methodologies were developed
to assess the slipstream risk of HSTs in their prototype design phase. The slipstream of
an Inter-City-Express 3 (ICE3) HST was measured and compared to full-scale experimental
data. The scaled methodologies replicated the full-scale slipstream profiles and
gust results when measured at low positions. However, they appeared less accurate at
high measurement positions. This difficulty is proposed to be caused by the presence
of ambient wind in the full-scale results and the higher Reynolds numbers, which reduces
the overall coherence of the wake topology responsible for the peak slipstream
velocities.
Analysis of the scaled moving-model and full-scale results provided insight into the
causal flow physics of the peak slipstream velocities. These results indicated that the
fluctuation and resulting peak instantaneous velocity are a result of alternating `types'
of individual slipstream runs that could be explained by capturing a periodic wake at
different phases.
A model of the salient time-averaged and unsteady features of the wake has been
developed from numerous experimental wind-tunnel techniques and analysis. The wake
features a pair of streamwise counter-rotating vortices that move downwards and outwards
causing the largest slipstream velocities. The unsteady wake was found to contain
vortex shedding from the train's sides and weaker vortex shedding from the roof that
interact and merge with the streamwise vortices. This results in an anti-symmetric
spanwise oscillation of the streamwise vortices with additional vertical translation at a
frequency of St= 0.2. These dynamics cause the slipstream velocity to oscillate and
results in the maximum instantaneous slipstream velocities measured, as the near-wake
oscillated towards a stationary observer.
The effect of modelling a reduced length train on the slipstream and wake was also
investigated. Increasing L/H resulted in a thicker surface boundary layer that increased
slipstream velocity above the streamwise vortices. The slipstream at low measurement
positions and the time-average and unsteady wake appeared to be insensitive to the
L/H modelled.