Impact loads from running trains induce natural vibration within the ballast layer, which causes ballast deterioration over time. This study measured the natural vibration characteristics of the ballast layer using field measurements, full-scale impact loading experiments and large-scale finite element analysis. Experimental test results indicate that the vibration components in the high-frequency range are dominant in ballast responses under loading and that ballast motions during unloading are mainly induced by vibration components in the low-frequency range, causing large displacement over a long duration. Numerical results indicate that the normal frequency of the vertical elastic vibration mode is detected at approximately 310 Hz and that the rigid-body bounce mode of the ballast layer occurs at one-third of the elastic vibration mode frequency. They coincide substantially with values held by field measurements. Stress acting on the angular part of the ballast is more than 1000 times greater than the average loading stress under the sleeper bottom. The combined structure, which consists of the ballast layer and sleepers, vibrates easily in synchrony with resonance motions induced by the impulse waves. Improvement of the contact condition on the sleeper bottom is expected to decrease the displacement amplitude of ballast gravel, thereby reducing ballast degradation.
Part of the book: New Trends in Structural Engineering