TY - JOUR
T1 - Modelling and analysis of a pantograph pneumatic actuator under large-catenary-gradient operation
AU - Sanad, Mishaal
AU - Liu, Xiaofu
AU - Li, Yuan
AU - Titurus, Branislav
AU - Jiang, Jason Zheng
AU - He, Haonan
AU - Graham, Mark
AU - Zhu, Ming
AU - Neild, Simon
AU - Barton, David A.W.
AU - Antunes, Pedro
AU - Dos Santos, Jose Machado
AU - Pombo, Joao
AU - Askill, Matt
AU - Stainton, Richard
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2026/5/4
Y1 - 2026/5/4
N2 - Dynamic behaviour of railway pantographs are significantly impacted by catenaries with large gradients. In such scenarios, the pantograph response is largely governed by the base pneumatic actuator. Specifically for this actuator, it operates as a passively-regulated pneumatic suspension (PRPS) device, offering both constant-force actuation and passive suspension. Such device is crucial for the interaction dynamics, hence the contact quality, between the pantograph and overhead line system. The existing modelling approach of PRPS devices has evident limitations: (1) it focussed on predicting only a specific operation condition, (2) it relies on tuning non-physical parameters, rather than the underlying physics of each component, making the model unable to predict alternative designs. To address those limitations, in this work a physics-based nonlinear network model for a railway pantograph PRPS device is developed. Here, multiple operation conditions, including straight-wire and large-gradient cases, are considered. Validation of the model response under multiple operating conditions is achieved through testing. In addition, a model parametric study that varies component property is performed and experimentally verified. This suggests that the developed model can accurately predict multiple operating conditions, and be used to explore alternative designs for future performance enhancement.
AB - Dynamic behaviour of railway pantographs are significantly impacted by catenaries with large gradients. In such scenarios, the pantograph response is largely governed by the base pneumatic actuator. Specifically for this actuator, it operates as a passively-regulated pneumatic suspension (PRPS) device, offering both constant-force actuation and passive suspension. Such device is crucial for the interaction dynamics, hence the contact quality, between the pantograph and overhead line system. The existing modelling approach of PRPS devices has evident limitations: (1) it focussed on predicting only a specific operation condition, (2) it relies on tuning non-physical parameters, rather than the underlying physics of each component, making the model unable to predict alternative designs. To address those limitations, in this work a physics-based nonlinear network model for a railway pantograph PRPS device is developed. Here, multiple operation conditions, including straight-wire and large-gradient cases, are considered. Validation of the model response under multiple operating conditions is achieved through testing. In addition, a model parametric study that varies component property is performed and experimentally verified. This suggests that the developed model can accurately predict multiple operating conditions, and be used to explore alternative designs for future performance enhancement.
KW - experimental identification
KW - large-gradient operation
KW - model validation
KW - pantograph dynamics
KW - parametric study
KW - Passively-regulated pneumatic suspension
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105037815943
U2 - 10.1080/00423114.2026.2663483
DO - 10.1080/00423114.2026.2663483
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105037815943
SN - 0042-3114
JO - Vehicle System Dynamics
JF - Vehicle System Dynamics
ER -