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  1. Videos
  2. Video

Closer Running: Magic Capacity Potion or Poison?

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Event
  • Session
  • Thursday, 24 October 2019
  • 09:24 - 09:24
  • Duration: 21 mins
  • Publication date: 25 Nov 2019
  • Location: Senaatszall , TU Delft, Delft, Netherlands
  • Part of event ASPECT 2019 - Inst. of Railway Signal Engineers

About the session

The low adhesion at the wheel-rail interface is a fundamental characteristic of railway systems, leading inevitably to long stopping distances. As a consequence, traditional fixed block methods of train control prevent railways from using the infrastructure fully. Increases in demand for railway journeys and the difficulty of adding infrastructure has led to a philosophy that enables trains to be separated by less than a full braking distance, similar to motorway driving. This concept is based on the premiss that it is unrealistic to assume that a train stops instantly and, therefore using the full braking distance in a system design is an overly cautious approach. It offers potentially greater capacity but there are concerns that a catastrophic event would occur when the preceding train is stopped instantaneously. Technologies exist for these systems. However, it has not yet been applied to operational railway systems. According to IEC 61508, a safety analysis should be performed early in the system life cycle to reduce systematic risks and reduce cost. In the paper, the authors aim to review critically the research into closer running of trains and conduct a safety analysis of the approach. To investigate the increase in railway capacity, the authors simulated a scenario of two consecutive services diverge from a line and making station stops of 90 s. The model indicated a capacity improvement of 14% over ETCS Level 3.For the safety analysis of the system, the authors compared two approaches: (1) event chain accident causation model based safety analysis methods which include traditional tools, such as HAZOP, FMEA and FTA and (2) a systematic theory accident causation model, which is relatively new. They summarise the advantages and disadvantages of applying this novel approach.For approach (1), Event Tree Analysis and Boolean algebra were applied to quantify the probability of an accident using data from industry statistics and reports covering a 10-year period. The event tree analysis indicates that the probability of a passenger being injured due to a train stopping at an unacceptable rate is 1 in 1.23 million journeys. This falls into the regions of negligible and tolerable risk. Investigations into historical incidents reveal the following as having the potential of decelerating a train rapidly: fallen trees, road vehicles, cattle, engineering work and track plant, most importantly, avalanches, landslides and debris. Thus environmental factors present the greatest hazard. Climate change increases rainfall severity increases the risk of landslides.For approach (2), he authors extended the Unified Modelling Language into a sequence diagram meta-model for STPA, to analyse the safety of the ETCS level 4 system. The authors identified hazards in operational scenarios, built the associated model, and discovered unsafe control actions (UCA) that could lead to hazards. For each unsafe control action, the authors further identified the causal scenarios that lead to the unsafe control action and propose mitigations or solutions. The systematic theory accident causation model based methods are applied to only one hazard analysis. Further research is therefore required to adopt the method for safety analyses.

Keywords:
  • Accident models
  • Battery
  • Battery fires
  • Battery storage
  • Battery technology
  • Cells
  • Cyber security
  • EV
  • Electric Vehicles
  • Flooding
  • Lithium Ion batteries
  • Lithium batteries
  • Low emission
  • Safety

Channels

Power

Power

Transport

Transport

Speakers

  • Felix Schmid

    Felix Schmid

    Felix Schmid was born in Zürich, Switzerland, where he attended the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. He graduated with a degree in electrical and electronic engineering, specialising in power and control systems. He worked in Switzerland for two years, as a computer systems analyst, and then moved to Manchester, England, where he worked as a locomotive control engineer with GEC Traction (now part of Alstom) for three and a half years. For the following three years he was a research assistant at UMIST (now part of Manchester University), working in very low current electronics, and at Salford University, where he designed and built machine tools. He became a lecturer at Brunel University in 1985 and taught control engineering and computer integrated manufacturing, before being seconded to the Swiss Federal Office of Transport, as a railway signalling inspector. Felix joined the University of Sheffield in 1994, tasked with creating the MSc programme in Railway Systems Engineering. He moved to the Birmingham Centre for Railway Research and Education at the University of Birmingham in 2005, where he became director of education. He established research in railway capacity and railway safety. Prof Schmid is a Fellow of the IRSE, the IMechE and the PWI.
  • Shuxia Lu

    Shuxia Lu

    Shuxia Lu is working at Siemens Mobility UK as a System Engineer currently. She graduated from University of Birmingham, where she received a MSc in Railway Risk and Safety Management with the dissertation on System-Theoretic Safety Analysis Applied to ETCS Level 4
energy conservation energy resources energy storage battery powered vehicles electric vehicles fuel cell vehicles hybrid electric vehicles road vehicles transportation vehicles
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