California South Coast AQMD adopts Rail Yards Indirect Source Rule
Air Quality Stripes illustrate changing concentrations of particulate matter since beginning of industrial revolution

TU Graz study shows non-exhaust emissions from trains have a relevant influence on air quality and soil pollution

In a study commissioned by the German Center for Rail Transport Research (DZSF), researchers from the Institute of Thermodynamics and Sustainable Propulsion Systems at Graz University of Technology (TU Graz) have shown that non-exhaust emissions from rail transport also have a relevant influence on air quality and soil pollution.

This applies especially to areas along railway line sections where there is increased braking; this includes station approaches and sections with speed limits. The abrasion emissions from rail vehicles alone reached values of up to 25 micrograms of particulate matter in the PM10 category (particles with a diameter of less than ten micrometres) per cubic meter as a daily average in Augsburg along the railway lines investigated for the study. This already corresponds to half of the permissible limit of 50 micrograms per cubic meter.

With increasing distance from the railway lines—from about ten meters—the pollution from the abrasion of the rail vehicles decreases rapidly, but the fine particulate matter also enters the soil and water and is deposited there.

The proportion of heavy metals in railway emissions is significantly higher than in other modes of transport, which is reflected in more heavily polluted deposits. DZSF chemists involved in the project were able to detect these residues in bodies of water.

In order to determine the composition and source of the abrasion particles, the components involved were analyzed in various laboratories. Daniel Fruhwirt and his team tested several brake pads in the new brake test rig for rail vehicles at TU Graz. At the Politecnico di Milano, researchers analyzed the abrasion of the contact wire and the pantograph in order to be able to classify the fine dust emissions from trains on overhead lines. At DB Systemtechnik in Berlin, the team scrutinized the wheel-rail contact. The resulting data made it possible to allocate the emissions to air, soil and water to the rail vehicles.

Based on our study, we can clearly say that non-exhaust emissions from rail are not negligible. Before we did this study, there was a huge gap in the data on abrasion emissions from rail vehicles and we were able to make a significant contribution to closing it. Although emissions do not single-handedly cause pollutant limits to be exceeded, they certainly play a role in the overall mix. It is therefore important that efforts are made to also assess emissions behaviour in the future when certifying brakes.

—Daniel Fruhwirt from the Institute of Thermodynamics and Sustainable Propulsion Systems at TU Graz

Resources

  • Daniel Fruhwirt, Thomas Nöst, Philipp Leonhardt, Martin Leitner, Peter Brunnhofer, Gina Bode, Sabrina Michael, Johannes Rodler, Characterization of emissions from axle-mounted rail disc brakes, Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment, Volume 130, 2024, 104181, doi: 10.1016/j.trd.2024.104181

Comments

The comments to this entry are closed.