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   Demixing of railway infrastructure  evaluated  
At present many railway lines have a mixed operation, i.e. trains with big speed differences run on the same lines. In an effort to increase capacity without investing in additional infrastructure, infrastructure operators try to “demix” their infrastructure by restricting trains to specific tracks according to average speed. Improved traffic fluidity may reduce energy consumption.
Technology field: Energy efficient driving
close main section General information
  close sub-section Description
   

Currently many railway companies operate on a mixed infrastructure, i.e. trains with big speed differences (e.g. freight and high speed passenger trains) run on the same tracks. This has a number of drawbacks: low capacity, additional infrastructure costs for passing lanes etc.

Therefore infrastructure operators try to “demix” their infrastructure by restricting trains to different tracks according to average speed. Figure 1 shows (in a very simplified manner) the principle of line demixing and the consequent increase in line capacity.

This can be a way to increase system capacity without investing in new infrastructure, thus lowering specific infrastructure costs.

Presently many railways recur to temporal demixing, i.e. freight trains running during night hours, passenger trains during day-time. In many cases, the spatial demixing described here is however a much better and much more customer-friendly strategy.

Figure 1: Principle of line demixing and capacity effect (simplified)

Demixing1.gif

Source: IZT

close main section General criteria
  close sub-section Status of development: not applicable
    Demixing is nothing new in railways. Growing speed differences due to high-speed traffic and capacity problems have however increased the need for speed-homogeneous lines.
  Time horizon for broad application: not applicable
    Current and future degrees of line demixing is obviously highly country specific. The demixing initiative “Netz 21” of the German DB AG is scheduled to demix great parts of the infrastructure by 2010.
  Expected technological development: not applicable
    (no details available)
    Motivation:
   
  • Increased capacity
  • Reduced costs
  • Competition
  Benefits (other than environmental): big
   

Increased capacity

As visualized in Figure 2, demixing may considerably increase line capacity.

Studies by DB AG indicate that demixing main line passenger from freight traffic could increase line capacity by 25%. Including the local line passenger traffic in the demixing strategy may raise the capacity gain to up to 45%. These figures are however DB specific and may not be applicable as such to other railways.

Reduced costs

Increased capacity obviously reduces specific infrastructure costs. Furthermore additional infrastructure needed on mixed lines for train passing is no longer required on demixed lines. On a mixed infrastructure, all tracks have to meet the specific requirements of all services and speeds. This includes for example big curve radii and low slopes for high-speed traffic. Therefore, demixing offers additional saving potential due to reduced costs for tunnel and bridge construction.

Competition

In many mixed infrastuctures, freight traffic is restricted to night hours. In increasingly competitive transportation markets with growing customer expectations, 24 hour freight traffic is a decisive competitive factor.

  Barriers: medium
    Train services cannot be arbitrarily moved to other lines, e.g. regional traffic with short stopping distances can often not be shifted to other tracks. Generally, demixing in a given infrastructure is limited by track “redundancy”, e.g. the number of alternative tracks connecting different points of the network.
    Success factors:
   

Demand-side development

Since the strategy of demixing is mainly an answer to capacity problems, it is closely related to demand for train services (passenger / freight volumes).

  Applicability for railway segments: high
    Type of traction:  electric - DC, electric - AC, diesel
    Type of transportation:  passenger - main lines, passenger - high speed, passenger - regional lines, passenger - suburban lines, freight
    (no details available)
    Grade of diffusion into railway markets:
  Diffusion into relevant segment of fleet: not applicable
  Share of newly purchased stock: not applicable
    (no details available)
  Market potential (railways): not applicable
    (no details available)
    Example:
   

Netz 21 programme at DB AG

Netz 21 (Network 21), an intiative for network optimisation, was drawn up by the German DB AG in the 1990s. The concept includes restructuring, standardisation, demixing and speed harmonisation, clearance of bottlenecks, the use of new technologies and a better exhaustion of transport potentials.

The eventual goal is a continuous performance network with higher customer usage and higher capacity at substantially lower cost. DB plans the step-by-step implementation to be finished by 2010.

Demixing of lines is a key element of Netz 21. The project foresees dividing up the entire network into three categories:

  • a demixed “Vorrangnetz” (priority network, total track length ~10.000 km): this part of the network connects big agglomeration areas (big cities) and includes all those lines with clear speed priorities, i.e. tracks with high, medium or low speeds respectively. Railway operators may only run their trains on these lines if their trains run at the respective priority speed or if they can ensure that their trains do not disturb other trains at any time.
  • a mixed “Leistungsnetz” (performance network, ~10.000 km) for mixed main-line and local-line passenger as well as freight traffic.
  • a mixed “Regionalnetz” (regional network, ~17.500 km) supplements the other two networks.

DB AG estimates that the capacity of the priority and performance networks will be increased by Netz 21 by about 30%.

close main section Environmental criteria
  close sub-section Impacts on energy efficiency:
  Energy efficiency potential for single vehicle: not applicable
  Energy efficiency potential throughout fleet: (no data)
   

A positive effect of demixing on the energy efficiency of train operation is to be expected since demixing improves traffic fluidity by avoiding train stops or decelerations caused by speed differences.

There are however different effects brought about by demixing that have to be clearly distinguished:

  1. Scheduled stops on the way due to slower trains letting pass faster trains are clearly reduced in a demixed infrastructure.
  2. Unscheduled stops due to delayed trains impeding other trains may be reduced by demixing (cf. Figure 2).
  3. Increased train density in a demixed infrastructure with raised capacity may increase number of train conflicts due to delays.

Figure 2: Schematic visualization of effect of train delys in mixed vs. demixed infrastructure (simplified)

Demixing2.gif

Source: IZT

Effects 1 and 2 reduce the probability of train stops outside stations in a demixed infrastructure (as compared to the mixed case), effect 3 points in the opposite direction. It is very difficult to make a general statement on the dominance of one effect over the other and the total net effect.

Experts however tend to assume that effects 2 and 3 compensate each other yielding a zero net result. Effect 1 could then slightly improve overall “stopping statistics”.

Conclusion

Energy efficiency effects through demixing depend strongly on the individual network situation and trains densities. In most cases, the net effect will rather be a small positive one. It will however be extremely difficult to give reliable numbers in this context.

  Other environmental impacts: positive
    Demixing is a way to increase capacity of existing infrastructure. In many cases this may eliminate (or reduce) the need for constructing new infrastructure. This is beneficial not only from an economic but also from an environmental point of view (less area consumption).
close main section Economic criteria
  close sub-section Vehicle - fix costs: none
    Demixing is a measure only concerning infrastructure, not rolling stock.
  Vehicle - running costs: minor reduction
    (no details available)
  Infrastructure - fix costs: low
    Since demixing is an effort to exploit existing infrastructure up to the maximum, investment in new infrastructure can be substantially reduced. New infrastructure will be much cheaper if planned for demixed traffic in the first place since additional infrastructure for train passing is not required on demixed lines.
  Infrastructure - running costs: reduced
    Raising train capacity reduces specific infrastructure costs, i.e. infrastructure costs per passenger-km or ton-km supplied on this infrastructure. But even the absolute running costs are reduced, because demixing favors a lean infrastructure, since additional tracks for train passing are not required and each line has to meet the requirements of one traffic class only.
  Scale effects: none
    (no details available)
  Amortisation: not applicable
    (no details available)
no data available Application outside railway sector (this technology is railway specific)
close main section Overall rating
  close sub-section Overall potential: interesting
  Time horizon: mid-term
    Poor traffic fluidity substantially increases the energy demand for train operation. Since many train conflicts are caused or aggravated by trains running on the same track at different speeds, the demixing of railway infrastructure has a certain potential for improved energy efficiency. However, since the main motivation for line demixing is to increase capacity, in many cases, traffic fluidity gains through demixing will be mostly or fully compensated by increased traffic density.
References / Links:  Fricke et al. 2000;  Fricke, Janiak 1996;  Ilgmann 1998
Attachments:
Related projects:
Contact persons:
 date created: 2002-10-09
 
 
© UIC - International Union of Railways 2003
 
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