[0001] The invention refers to a track bed for a railroad track, comprising track ballast
made from particulate matter and a multitude of railroad ties supported on the track
ballast, wherein at least one region of the track ballast is stabilized by means of
a bonding agent that bonds together particles of the particulate matter.
[0002] Further, the invention refers to a method of stabilizing a track bed for a railroad
track, said track bed comprising track ballast made from particulate matter and a
multitude of railroad ties supported on the track ballast.
[0003] Track ballast forms the track bed, upon which railroad ties are laid. The track ballast
is packed between, below and around the ties and is typically made of crushed stone.
With regard to the shape of the particles, it is important that the stones are irregularly
cut and have relatively sharp edges, so that they properly interlock and grip the
ties in order to fully secure them against movement.
[0004] The mechanical strength of the track ballast is essential for the stability of the
railroad track bed. Since ballast consists of granular material, its strength and
failure properties are determined by the frictional contact interactions between the
ballast particles. There have been many attempts to improve the mechanical stability
of track ballast so as to improve its lifetime and reduce maintenance operations.
[0005] Some solutions comprise cohering the individual particles of the particulate matter
into a coherent elastic structure with a polymeric bonding agent. For example, it
is known from
EP 1 619 305 B1 to foam up the cavities of a ballast bed of a railway track with polyurethane (PU).
For this, the reactants isocyanate, polyol and additives are mixed up as foaming agent
and introduced into the cavities of the ballast bed where they react to form polyurethane
foam.
[0006] Alternatively, it is also known to spray or pour polymeric resins onto the surface
of the track ballast. This solution is effective technically, but is complex to implement
because of the exposure of the workers and the environment to reactive and often harmful
chemicals. This requires particular precautions on the jobsite to protect the workers,
and to minimise that excess product is released into the environment, which would
typically contaminate ground water. Furthermore, the resins that are used are relatively
expensive.
[0007] The advantages of binding the individual particles of the particulate matter of the
track ballast into a coherent structure by means of a bonding agent comprise enhanced
track stability, resistance to rock displacement and improved riding qualities. With
these advantages, however, a major drawback has been the inability to release the
ballast from its consolidated condition for repairs to the road bed without major
destruction of the consolidated material. Further, the particulate matter, once removed
from the track for maintenance purposes, cannot be easily recycled due to its material
composition comprising the polymeric bonding agent.
[0008] Therefore, the invention aims at providing improvements in stabilizing track ballast
and to overcome the drawbacks of the prior art solutions as described above.
[0009] To solve these and other objects, the invention according to a first aspect thereof
provides a track bed for a railroad track, comprising track ballast made from particulate
matter and a multitude of railroad ties supported on the track ballast, wherein at
least one region of the track ballast is stabilized by means of a bonding agent that
bonds together particles of the particulate matter, characterized in that the bonding
agent is based on a hydraulic binder, in particular cement, and that the bonding agent
leaves free voids between the bonded particles so that the track ballast has a water
draining capability in said at least one stabilized region.
[0010] By using a bonding agent that is based on a hydraulic binder, a strong bond can be
achieved between the individual particles of the particulate matter of the track ballast.
Hydraulic binders are widely used in the constructional industry and are known in
a great number of different variations and mixtures so that the invention makes available
a proven technology for stabilizing track ballast. The handling of hydraulic binders
at the jobsite is safe and does not require specific safety measures. Neither the
workers nor the environment is exposed to harmful chemicals. Furthermore, hydraulic
binders are much less expensive than polymers, such as polyurethane foam or resins.
[0011] Another advantage is that the bonding agent is mineral-based instead of organic-based
so that the coherent structure consisting of the particulate matter (in particular
crushed stone) and the bonding agent is altogether a mineral material that can easily
be recycled.
[0012] Furthermore, using a bonding agent based on a hydraulic binder enables the stabilisation
of the track ballast without modifying the actual track design.
[0013] According to the invention, the bonding agent leaves free voids between the bonded
particles so that the track ballast has a water draining capability in said at least
one stabilized region. Therefore, the bonding agent is applied in such a way that
fluid flow can occur through the track ballast so that rainwater can drain, in particular
towards the outer sides of the track ballast. The draining capability requires that
the voids arranged between the particles of the particulate matter are interconnected
resulting in a certain degree of open porosity of the track ballast.
[0014] In order to keep the water draining capability of the track ballast, a certain amount
of bonding agent should not be exceeded, since the bonding agent would otherwise completely
fill the voids between the particles, which in turn would impair the draining capability.
According to a preferred embodiment, the stabilized region has a mass ratio of bonding
agent to track ballast of 1:10 - 1:20, in particular about 1:12.
[0015] Hydraulic binders are substances used in construction that set in the presence of
water and harden. By adhering to the particles of the track ballast, the bonding agent
based on a hydraulic binder binds the particles together. According to a preferred
embodiment, the bonding agent is a hardened cement slurry, in particular a hardened
cement paste or cement mortar. A cement paste is a mixture of cement and water as
well as optionally admixtures. A mortar is a mixture of cement, water and fine aggregates
as well as optionally admixtures.
[0016] Preferably, the hydraulic binder is a Portland cement binder, wherein the Portland
cement preferably is a cement of the type CEM I, CEM II or CEM III.
[0017] In order to provide stabilisation to the track ballast, it is not necessary to have
all the particles of the entire track ballast bonded with each other. Rather, stabilizing
only specific regions of the track ballast may be sufficient, in particular with a
view to stabilising the track ballast when it is already placed with railroad ties
already being supported on the track ballast and rails fixed to the ties. Further,
the bonding of particles is not desired directly below the railroad ties, because
the particles should remain free in this region to move in order to provide a lateral
confinement of the structure.
[0018] Therefore, according to a preferred embodiment, the track ballast comprises a central
region located below said railroad ties and side regions arranged on both sides of
said central region, wherein only the side regions are stabilized by said bonding
agent. In particular, the side regions correspond to the outer slopes of the track
ballast on either side of the ties. The track ballast in the central region can be
easily replaced and/or compacted without breaking the bonding in the side regions.
[0019] According to a second aspect the invention provides a method of stabilizing a track
bed for a railroad track, said track bed comprising track ballast made from particulate
matter and a multitude of railroad ties supported on the track ballast, wherein particles
of the particulate matter are bonded together by means of a bonding agent that is
based on a hydraulic binder, in particular cement, said bonding agent being applied
to the particles of the particulate matter so as to leave free voids between the bonded
particles so that the track ballast has a water draining capability.
[0020] Preferably, the bonding agent comprises or consists of a cement slurry, in particular
a cement paste or a cement mortar.
[0021] Preferably, the hydraulic binder is a Portland cement binder. Portland cement as
used in the invention may be any type of Portland cement, whatever its chemical composition
is. Suitable cements used in the invention preferably are the cements described according
to the European EN 197-1 Standard of April 2012 or mixtures thereof, preferably cement
of the types CEM I, CEM II, CEM III, CEM IV or CEM V. Preferably, the Portland cement
preferably is a cement of the type CEM I, CEM II or CEM III.
[0022] In another embodiment, the hydraulic binder contains high amounts of aluminate phases,
namely where the cumulated alumina content of the binder is between 10wt.-% and 50wt.-%.
These aluminate phases can be provided by a specific cement, such as a calcium sulphoaluminate
cement, a calcium aluminate cement, or a specific binder such as that described in
EP 1781579. In a preferred embodiment, such a binder can be a mixture of 50wt.-% CEM I, 25wt.-%
gypsum, and 25wt.-% calcium aluminate cement, such as Ciment Fondu produced by Kerneos.
[0023] Preferably, the track ballast comprises a central region located below said railroad
ties and side regions arranged on both sides of said central region, wherein the bonding
agent is only applied to the particles of the side regions.
[0024] The bonding agent can be applied to the track ballast in various ways. According
to a first alternative, which is preferred, the bonding agent is poured or sprayed
onto the track ballast from above in at least one region to be stabilized. Preferably,
compressed-air spraying is used, which allows to deeply spray bonding agents having
different fluidity. The bonding agent that is poured or sprayed onto the surface of
the track ballast will also be distributed within the track ballast under the influence
of gravity.
[0025] According to a second alternative, the bonding agent is mixed with the particles
of said particulate matter and the resulting mixture is placed as track ballast on
a track formation. This embodiment can be suitable for the construction of new lines,
or for when the aggregates of the ballast are replaced in large maintenance operations.
[0026] In order to safeguard that the bonding agent, in particular when it is sprayed or
poured onto the track ballast, effectively impregnates the bed of track ballast and
bind the particles throughout the depth of the bed on the one hand and does not clog
the voids between the particles on the other hand, the bonding agent should have a
low viscosity and/or a high flowability when being applied. In this connection, a
preferred embodiment provides that the flowability of the bonding agent, at the time
of application, is 2-7 seconds, preferably 2-4 seconds, with a specific funnel test
method that is identical to the method described in ASTM D6910/D6910M-09, and with
two modifications:
- The funnel's dimensions used are: internal top cone diameter: 149 mm, internal bottom
cone diameter: 17.3 mm, bottom tube height 30.3 mm, total height 190 mm (comprising
cone and bottom tube).
- The time measured to characterize the flowability corresponds to the flow of 0.6 L
of the product, and not 1 L as in ASTM D6910/D6910M-09.
[0027] Alternatively, the flowability may also be expressed in terms of the spread of the
slurry, wherein a preferred embodiment provides that the bonding agent has an initial
spread of at least 90 mm, measured according to a test method inspired from EN 12350-8
referring to the testing of fresh concrete/self-compacting concrete, wherein the dimensions
are adjusted for slurries (height 57 mm, internal diameter at top: 21 mm, internal
diameter at bottom: 37 mm), 5 min after mixing.
[0028] The adjustment of the rheological properties of the bonding agent, in particular
depending on the application method (pouring or spraying), may be achieved by methods
known to the person skilled in the art, such as admixture selection and dosage and/or
water to cement ratio variations.
[0029] In order to increase the flowability of the bonding agent, the Portland cement, according
to a preferred embodiment of the invention, has a specific surface (Blaine) of 3000
- 10000 cm
2/g, preferably 3500 - 6000 cm
2/g.
[0030] Preferably, the bonding agent has a water/binder ratio of 0.4 to 0.6, where the mass
of binder includes the Portland cement and, if any, mineral particles, such as slag,
fly ash, silica fume, natural or synthetic pozzolans, limestone fillers, siliceous
fillers, calcined clays, or mixtures thereof.
[0031] Preferably, the bonding agent, in particular the cement paste or the cement mortar,
comprises a water reducer, in particular a plasticiser or super-plasticiser, such
as a polycarboxylate based or a polynaphthalene sulfonate based water reducer. A water
reducer makes it possible to reduce the amount of mixing water for a given workability
by typically 10-15% or to increase flowability for a given water/binder ratio. By
way of example of water reducers, mention may be made of lignosulphonates, hydroxycarboxylic
acids, carbohydrates, and other specific organic compounds, for example glycerol,
polyvinyl alcohol, sodium alumino-methyl-siliconate, sulfanilic acid and casein.
[0032] Super-plasticisers belong to a new class of water reducers and are capable of reducing
water contents of mixing water, for a given workability, by approximately 30% by mass.
By way of example of a superplasticizer, the PCP super-plasticisers without an anti-foaming
agent may be noted. The term "PCP" or "polyoxy polycarboxylate" is to be understood
according to the present invention as a copolymer of acrylic acids or methacrylic
acids and their esters of polyoxyethylene (POE).
[0033] Preferably, the cement slurry comprises 0.05 to 1%, more preferably 0.05 to 0.7%
of a water reducer, a plasticiser or a superplasticizer, percentage expressed by mass
relative to the dry cement mass.
[0034] The setting time can be adjusted depending on the requirements. A fast setting mortar
is for example suitable in maintenance operations that are carried out during night
time maintenance slots of existing lines, and when the railway tracks need to be reopened
the following morning. The reduction of the setting times is then carried out by using
known strong set time accelerators regularly purchased from admixture suppliers. These
products may be formulations based on calcium or sodium nitrates, nitrites, chlorides,
thiocyanates, or aluminium sulphates.
[0035] Preferably, the bonding agent used in the invention comprises 0.05 to 2.5 wt.-% of
an accelerator, expressed as dry mass relative to dry cement mass.
[0036] According to an embodiment of the invention, other additives may be added to the
bonding agent. Such additives may be setting retarders, coloured pigments, film forming
agents, hydrophobic agents or de-polluting agents (for example zeolites or titanium
dioxide), latex, organic or mineral fibres, mineral additions or their mixtures.
[0037] According to an embodiment of the invention, the bonding agent used in the invention
may further comprise mineral particles. Preferably, the bonding agent may comprise
15 to 75% of mineral particles, more preferably from 15 to 65%, most preferably from
20 to 55%, the percentages being expressed by mass relative to the dry mass of cement.
[0038] The suitable mineral particles have a maximum particle size of 200 micrometres are
selected from calcium carbonate, silica, ground glass, solid or hollow glass beads,
glass granules, expanded glass powders, silica aerogels, silica fume, slags, ground
sedimentary siliceous sands, fly ash or pozzolanic materials or mixtures thereof.
[0039] The mineral particles used according to the invention may be slags (for example,
as defined in the European NF EN 197-1 Standard of April 2012, paragraph 5.2.2), pozzolanic
materials (for example as defined in the European NF EN 197-1 Standard of April 2012,
paragraph 5.2.3), fly ash (for example, as described in the European NF EN 197-1 Standard
of April 2012, paragraph 5.2.4), calcined schists (for example, as described in the
European NF EN 197-1 Standard of April 2012, paragraph 5.2.5), material containing
calcium carbonate, for example limestone (for example, as defined in the European
NF EN 197-1 Standard paragraph 5.2.6), silica fume (for example, as defined in the
European NF EN 197-1 Standard of April 2012, paragraph 5.2.7), siliceous additions
(for example, as defined in the "Concrete" NF P 18-509 Standard), metakaolin or mixtures
thereof.
[0040] Fly ash is generally pulverulent particles comprise in fume from thermal power plants
which are fed with coal. Fly ash is generally recovered by electrostatic or mechanical
precipitation.
[0041] Slags are generally obtained by rapid cooling of molten slag resulting from melting
of iron ore in a blast furnace.
[0042] Silica fume may be a material obtained by the reduction of very pure quality quartz
by the coal in electric arc furnaces used for the production of silicon and alloys
of ferrosilicon. Silica fume is generally formed of spherical particles comprising
at least 85% by mass of amorphous silica.
[0043] The pozzolanic materials may be natural siliceous and/or silico-aluminous materials
or a combination thereof. Among the pozzolanic materials, natural pozzolans can be
mentioned, which are generally materials of volcanic origin or sedimentary rocks,
and natural calcined pozzolans, which are materials of volcanic origin, clays, shale
or thermally-activated sedimentary rocks.
[0044] With regard to the amount of bonding agent used to bond the particles of the particulate
matter with each other, a preferred embodiment provides that the bonding agent is
poured or sprayed onto the track ballast in an amount of 40-70, preferably 50-70,
more preferably 55-65, litres per m
2 of track ballast surface and per m of track ballast thickness.
[0045] Preferably, the bonding agent is poured or sprayed onto the track ballast in such
an amount that a homogeneous bed of said bonding agent is formed at the bottom of
the track ballast, said bed preferably having a height of 5-20 mm. In this embodiment
the bonding agent is applied in excess so that the bonding agent forms a bed at the
bottom of the track ballast so as to increase the stability of the ballast. In this
particular embodiment, the fluidity of the bonding agent must be so high that the
voids between the particles remain at least partially free from the bonding agent
so that the track ballast remains permeable to water.
[0046] According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the flexural strength of the
bonding agent after having set and hardened is selected to be 1-5 MPa, in particular
1-2 MPa (measured on prisms having a dimension of 4*4*16 cm according to EN 196-01
24h after mixing). In this way, the cohesion provided by the bonding agent is enough
to stabilize the track ballast, but not too high, so that ballast replacing machines
are able to break the bonding points and allow the replacement of treated ballast.
[0047] The appropriate thickness of a layer of track ballast depends on the size and spacing
of the ties, the amount of traffic on the line, and various other factors. The thickness
of the track ballast preferably is greater than 150 mm. With high-speed railway lines
the thickness of the track ballast may be up to 500 mm.
[0048] The invention will now be described in more detail wit reference to an exemplary
embodiment illustrated in Fig. 1. Fig. 1 shows a cross section of a track bed 1 for
a railroad track. The track bed 1 comprises a sub-ballast layer 2 and track ballast
3 made from particulate matter. A multitude of railroad ties 4 are supported on the
track ballast 3, wherein rails 5 are fixed to the railroad ties 4. In side regions
6 of the track ballast a bonding agent based on a hydraulic binder has been applied
so that the particles of the track ballast are bonded together.
[0049] The invention will also be described in more detail with reference to the following
examples.
Example 1
[0050] This example illustrates the bonding capacity of the bonding agent of the present
invention and the possibility to bond a specific given thickness of the track ballast
by depositing the suitable quantity of bonding agent per unit area of ballast.
[0051] The following materials were used for the test:
- Bonding agent: A Portland cement mortar with the following composition:
- CEM I 52.5 R (Lafarge France Le Teil plant): 750 parts by weight
- Limestone filler (BL 200): 375 parts by weight
- Sand with a particle size of 0-1 mm: 833 parts by weight
- Water: 420 parts by weight
The cement mortar was prepared by mixing the cement, the filler and the sand in a
Perrier planetary mixer during 15 sec. Thereafter, water was added to the mixture
during a time period of 30 sec and the mortar was mixed during 2 minutes at a slow
speed.
The fresh cement mortar has the following properties:
- Slump flow (method inspired from EN 12350-8 referring to the testing of fresh concrete/self-compacting
concrete, wherein the dimensions are adjusted for slurries (height 57 mm, internal
diameter at top: 21 mm, internal diameter at bottom: 37 mm) 5 min after mixing): 110
mm
- Modified Marsh Funnel: 2.5 seconds The cement mortar once hardened had a 24h compressive
strength of 6 MPa and a 24h flexural strength of 1 MPa (measured on prisms having
a dimension of 4*4*16 cm according to EN 196-01 24h after mixing).
- Ballast: Glensanda Ballast 35-65 having particle sizes of 35-65 mm. 23 +/-1 kg of
ballast was placed in a bucket (30 cm deep, 30 cm diameter) and compacted 30 seconds
on a vibrating table. The ballast height after compaction was obtained by the average
value of 4 height measurements (H1). The effective mass of ballast was measured (M1).
The apparent specific weight of the ballast (R1) and the ballast porosity (P1) were
calculated.
[0052] A given mass of bonding agent (M3) was deposited homogeneously at the top surface
of the ballast and then sealed in order to prevent any water loss which may cause
weight measurement artefacts. This sealing was done purely for the purpose of this
test. 24 hours after the application, the bonded ballast was unmoulded and the mass
of the bonded ballast (including the bonding agent) was measured (M2). The fraction
of the ballast bonded was evaluated first by calculating (M2-M3)/M1.
[0053] If any, the excess of bonding agent was quantified by determining the height of the
bonding agent layer (H2) at the bottom of the bucket. The volume of excess bonding
agent per surface unit was calculated: H2/P1 Three tests were performed, wherein the
test differed primarily in the mass of the bonding agent (M3) used.
[0054] The results are shown the following table:
Test |
Test 1 |
Test 2 |
Test 3 |
Ballast Mass M1 (kg) |
22 |
23.55 |
22.44 |
Ballast Height H1 (cm) |
22 |
23 |
22 |
Specific weight R1 (kg/m3) |
1415 |
1449 |
1443 |
Porosity (-) |
46% |
44% |
44% |
Mass of treated ballast M2 (kg) |
23.06 |
25.78 |
25.56 |
Mass of bonding agent applied M3 = M2 - M1 (kg) |
1.06 |
2.23 |
3.12 |
Volume of bonding agent per unit area of ballast (L/m2) |
7.5 |
15.7 |
22 |
Mass of bonded ballast with bonding agent M4 (kg) |
10.32 |
25.52 |
25.34 |
Mass of bonded ballast without bonding agent M5 = M4 - M3 (kg) |
9.26 |
23.29 |
22.22 |
Wt.-% of ballast bonded |
42 |
99 |
99 |
Depth of bonding (cm) |
9 |
23 |
22 |
Thickness of excess bonding agent H2 (cm) |
0 |
0.5 |
2 |
Volume of excess bonding agent in the bucket (L) |
0 |
0.13 |
0.63 |
Volume of excess bonding agent per surface unit (L/m2) |
0 |
1.8 |
8.9 |
[0055] Test 2 shows that with the application of 15.7 L/m
2 of bonding agent a thickness of 23 cm of ballast is bonded. An homogeneous layer
of 5mm of bonding agent is found at the bottom of the bucket.
[0056] Test 1 shows that with a lower amount of bonding agent per surface unit the depth
of bonding is reduced to 9cm. The percentage of ballast bonded is surprisingly closely
proportional to the amount of bonding agent deposited (42% versus 47% = 7.5/15.7).
[0057] Test 3 shows that with an amount of 22 L/m
2 of bonding agent all ballast is fully bonded. A homogeneous layer of 2 cm of bonding
agent is measured at the bottom of the bucket.
[0058] It is observed that in tests 2 and 3 the bonding agent was deposited in excess. When
subtracting this excess volume and normalize it by the thickness of ballast bonded,
one can calculate the minimal volume of bonding agent needed per ballast layer thickness
unit:
- For Test 2: (15.7-1.8)/0.23 = 60.7 L/m2/m, i.e. 60.7 litres of bonding agent per surface unit and per metre (depth) of ballast.
- For Test 3: (22-8.9)/0.22 = 59.7 L/m2/m, i.e. 59.7 litres of bonding agent per surface unit and per metre (depth) of ballast.
Example 2
[0059] In example 2 a number of different cement slurries were prepared that are suitable
as bonding agent according to the invention.
[0060] Table 1 illustrates the impact of different types of binder:
Table 1
Raw material (kg) |
Mix1 |
Mix2 |
Mix3 |
Mix4 |
Mix5 |
Mix6 |
Mix7 |
CEM I 52.5 R |
750 |
|
|
375 |
|
487 |
|
CEM II/A 42.5 R |
|
750 |
|
|
|
|
|
CEM III/A 42.5 N |
|
|
750 |
|
|
|
|
Finer CEM I 52.5 R |
|
|
|
|
375 |
|
|
Aluminate Cement |
|
|
|
|
|
|
375 |
Limestone Filler |
|
|
|
375 |
375 |
|
375 |
Fly Ash |
|
|
|
|
|
262 |
|
0-1 Sand |
805 |
833 |
833 |
833 |
833 |
|
833 |
Water |
460 |
420 |
420 |
420 |
420 |
460 |
420 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Slump-Flow (mm) |
105 |
105 |
100 |
110 |
95 |
105 |
110 |
Modified Marsh Funnel |
2.4 |
2.5 |
2.5 |
2.5 |
3 |
2.6 |
2.5 |
24h compressive strength (MPa) |
17 |
12 |
6.7 |
6 |
4.8 |
8.4 |
5.7 |
24h flexural strength (MPa) |
5.5 |
3.5 |
2.2 |
1 |
1.6 |
2.9 |
2.2 |
[0061] Table 2 illustrates the impact of different types of sand:
Table 2
Raw material (kg) |
Mix 4 |
Mix 8 |
Mix 9 |
CEM I 52.5 R |
375 |
375 |
550 |
Limestone Filler |
375 |
375 |
550 |
0-1 Sand |
833 |
|
|
0-2 Sand |
|
833 |
|
Water |
420 |
420 |
620 |
|
|
|
|
Slump-Flow (mm) |
110 |
105 |
115 |
O'Funnel |
2.5 |
2.4 |
2 |
24h compressive strength (MPa) |
6 |
6.1 |
5 |
24h flexural strength (MPa) |
1 |
2.3 |
2 |
[0062] Table 3 illustrates the impact different types of admixtures:
Table 3
Raw material (kg) |
Mix10 |
Mix11 |
Mix12 |
Mix13 |
Mix14 |
Mix15 |
CEM I 52.5 R |
375 |
375 |
375 |
375 |
375 |
375 |
Limestone Filler |
375 |
375 |
375 |
375 |
375 |
375 |
0-1 Sand |
833 |
1048 |
833 |
833 |
833 |
736 |
Superplasticizer |
|
2 |
|
|
|
|
Accelerator |
|
|
7.5 |
|
|
|
Fibres |
|
|
|
2.25 |
|
|
Latex |
|
|
|
|
40 |
|
Thickening agent |
|
|
|
|
|
0.2 |
Water |
420 |
330 |
420 |
420 |
401 |
450 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Slump-flow (mm) |
110 |
115 |
110 |
105 |
100 |
95 |
O'Funnel |
2.5 |
6 |
2.7 |
2.6 |
2.9 |
2.6 |
24h compressive strength (MPa) |
6 |
12 |
6.8 |
6.2 |
4.5 |
4.3 |
24h flexural strength (MPa) |
1 |
4 |
2.4 |
2.3 |
1.1 |
0.9 |
[0063] In the above examples, the following materials were used:
Materials |
Source |
GEM I 52.5 R |
Lafarge France, Le Teil plant |
CEM II/A 42.5 R |
Lafarge France Val D'Azergues plant |
CEM III/A 42.5 N |
Holcim Croatia, Adria Cement Koromačno plant |
Finer CEM I 52.5 R |
Lafarge France, Le Teil plant, blaine fineness 6000 m2/g |
Aluminate Cement |
Mixture of 50wt.-% CEM I 52.5 R, 25wt.-% gypsum, 25wt.-% calcium aluminate cement
(Ciment Fondu from Kerneos), |
Limestone Filler |
Omya BL 200 |
Fly Ash |
Cordemais plant |
0-1 Sand |
Sibelco BE 01 |
0-2 Sand |
EN Normalized sand |
Superplasticizer |
Chryso Premia 180 |
Accelerator |
CaCl2 |
Fibres |
Chryso Syntec 12 |
Latex |
Waker Etonis |
Thickening agent |
CP Kelco - Kelco-crete |
[0064] In the above examples, the bonding agent was prepared by the following method: The
cement mortar was prepared by mixing the cement, the filler and the sand in a Perrier
planetary mixer during 15 sec. Thereafter, water and additives were added to the mixture
during a time period of 30 sec and the mortar was mixed during 2 minutes at a slow
speed.
[0065] The material properties were measured as follows:
The slump flow was measured with a method inspired from EN 12350-8 referring to the
testing of fresh concrete/self-compacting concrete, wherein the dimensions are adjusted
for slurries (height 57mm, internal diameter at top: 21mm, internal diameter at bottom:
37mm) 5 min after mixing. The flow time was measured by the modified Marsh funnel
test, using the protocol described above.
[0066] The compressive strength and the flexural strength were measured on prisms having
a dimension of 4*4*16 cm according to EN 196-01 24h after mixing.
1. A track bed for a railroad track, comprising track ballast made from particulate matter
and a multitude of railroad ties supported on the track ballast, wherein at least
one region of the track ballast is stabilized by means of a bonding agent that bonds
together particles of the particulate matter, characterized in that the bonding agent is based on a hydraulic binder, in particular cement, and that
the bonding agent leaves free voids between the bonded particles so that the track
ballast has a water draining capability in said at least one stabilized region.
2. A track bed according to claim 1, characterized in that the bonding agent is a hardened cement slurry, in particular a hardened cement paste
or cement mortar.
3. A track bed according to claim 1 or 2, characterized in that the hydraulic binder is a Portland cement binder, wherein the Portland cement preferably
is a cement of then type CEM I, CEM II, CEM III, or aluminate cement.
4. A track bed according to claim 1, 2 or 3, characterized in that the track ballast comprises a central region located below said railroad ties and
side regions arranged on both sides of said central region, wherein only the side
regions are stabilized by said bonding agent.
5. A track bed according to any one of claims 1 to 4, characterized in that the stabilized region has a mass ratio of bonding agent to track ballast of 1:10
- 1:20, in particular about 1:12.
6. Method of stabilizing a track bed for a railroad track, said track bed comprising
track ballast made from particulate matter and a multitude of railroad ties supported
on the track ballast, wherein particles of the particulate matter are' bonded together
by means of a bonding agent that is based on a hydraulic binder, in particular cement,
said bonding agent being applied to the particles of the particulate matter so as
to leave free voids between the bonded particles so that the track ballast has a water
draining capability.
7. Method according to claim 6, characterized in that the bonding agent comprises or consists of a cement slurry, in particular a cement
paste or cement mortar.
8. Method according to claim 6 or 7, characterize in that the hydraulic binder is a Portland
cement binder, wherein the Portland cement preferably is a cement of the type CEM
I, CEM II, CEM III, or aluminate cement.
9. Method according to claim 6, 7 or 8, characterized in that the bonding agent is poured or sprayed onto the track ballast in at least one region
to be stabilized.
10. Method according to claim 6, 7 or 8, characterized in that the bonding agent is mixed with the particles of said particulate matter and the
resulting mixture is placed as track ballast on a track formation.
11. Method according to any one of claims 6 to 10, characterized in that the track ballast comprises a central region located below said railroad ties and
side regions arranged on both sides of said central region, wherein the bonding agent
is only applied to the particles of the side regions.
12. Method according to any one of claims 6 to 11, characterized in that the flowability of the bonding agent, at the time of application, is 2-7 seconds,
preferably 2-4 seconds, when measured according to a spread test method inspired from
the method described in ASTM D6910/D6910M-09, where the dimensions of the funnel are
adapted for slurries (internal top cone diameter: 149 mm, internal bottom cone diameter:
17.3 mm, bottom tube height: 30.3 mm, total height: 190 mm (comprising cone and bottom
tube)) and where the time measured to characterize the flowability corresponds to
the flow of 0.6 L of the product.
13. Method according to any one of claims 6 to 12, characterized in that the bonding agent has an initial slump of at least 90 mm, measured according to a
spread test method inspired from EN 12350-8 referring to the testing of fresh concrete/self-compacting
concrete, wherein the dimensions are adjusted for slurries (height 57 mm, internal
diameter at top: 21 mm, internal diameter at bottom: 37 mm) 5 min after mixing.
14. method according to any one of claims 6 to 13, characterized in that the Portland cement has a specific surface (Blaine) of 3000 - 10000 cm2/g, preferably 3500 - 6000 cm2/g.
15. Method according to any one of claims 6 to 14, characterized in that the bonding agent, in particular the cement paste, cement slurry or cement mortar,
comprises a water reducer, in particular a plasticiser or superplasticiser, such as
a polycarboxylate based or a polynaphthalene sulfonate based water reducer.
16. Method according to any one of claims 6 to 15, characterized in that the bonding agent is poured or sprayed onto the track ballast in an amount of 40-70,
preferably 50-70, more preferably 55-65, litres per m2 of track ballast surface and per m of track ballast thickness.
17. Method according to any one of claims 6 to 16, characterized in that the bonding agent is poured or sprayed onto the track ballast in such an amount that
a homogeneous bed of said bonding agent is formed at the bottom of the track ballast,
said bed preferably having a height of 5-20 mm.