Abstract:
The demand for quicker and safer transport and solutions for congestion in main highways during peak hours has made the railways the most favourable means of public transportation in many countries. Besides, the demand for increased axle loads of heavy-haul trains for industrial needs is inevitable  to  provide  a  cost-effective  and  efficient  transportation  system.  However,  when subjected  to  heavy  axle  and  faster  wheel  loading,  ballast  aggregates  rapidly  degrade, compromising the particle shear resistance and associated substructure‘s load-bearing capacity. The conventional geotechnical testing facilities such as direct shear, triaxial and permeability apparatus are the most versatile laboratory methods for obtaining the strength, deformation and drainage properties of fine-grained materials to small size granular rock specimens. The sizes of ballast particles used in rail tracks ranges from 20 mm to about 65 mm. Therefore, the load- bearing capacity of ballast and its deformation, degradation and drainage characteristics can only be studied using large-scale testing equipment, because the conventional geotechnical equipment cannot accommodate relatively large size aggregates. Nevertheless, the difference between the actual  particle  sizes  used  in  rail  tracks  and  the  significantly  reduced  particle  sizes  used  in aforesaid conventional laboratory equipment contribute to imprecise deformation, degradation and drainage behaviour and failure  modes. This  is because of the inevitable  size-dependent dilation  and  different  mechanisms  of  particle  crushing  that  occur  in  real-sized  particles.  To overcome these size-dependent problems, large-scale direct shear, triaxial, and permeability test facilities for testing ballast have been designed and built in-house at the Department of Civil Engineering  of  the  University  of  Peradeniya.  These  test  apparatus  provide  more  realistic information on stress, strain, degradation and drainage characteristics of ballast particles used in actual rail tracks. This study elucidates the results of this major testing program conducted at the Department of Civil Engineering where static, dynamic and drainage testing of ballast are being conducted. The Sri Lankan railway ballast materials tested by this large-scale testing shows that the friction angle of the fresh ballast is 69° and the permeability is 0.43 m/s which are generally within the accepted limits for railway ballast materials.