Bombardier Transportation Implements Model-Based Design to Accelerate Rail Propulsion System Development

“Our Simulink models serve as a single, cohesive source of our design—including documentation and implementation—which lowers costs and makes changes easier to implement. As we add more automated tests, we reduce certification costs, as well.”

Challenge

Reduce embedded control software lead times for rail propulsion systems

Solution

Use Model-Based Design to validate requirements, verify designs, and generate production code for embedded targets

Results

  • Costs reduced by 45%, lead time by 35%
  • Adoption of new workflow streamlined
  • Code implementation delays minimized
Bombardier train for Germany.

Bombardier train for Germany.

New designs for light rail, metro, commuter, intercity, locomotives, and high-speed trains must meet the specific needs of the cities or regions the vehicles will serve. In addition, software systems for these vehicles must comply with local and country-specific regulations, as well as with industry standards such as EN 50128 and EN 50657.

In the rail transportation industry, system tests often cannot be performed until a complete vehicle is built and on tracks. Discovering a missing requirement or a misunderstanding in requirements at this phase is exceptionally costly. Engineers at Alstom, formerly Bombardier Transportation, shortened lead times and reduced development costs for the company’s MITRAC propulsion and control systems by adopting Model-Based Design with MATLAB® and Simulink®.

“With Model-Based Design, we validate customer requirements and our designs much earlier, which enables us to reduce risk and shorten lead times by 35% or more,” says Claes Lindskog, manager of propulsion control, platform development at Bombardier Transportation. “Generating embedded code from our models enables us to merge design and implementation teams, minimizing delays and further reducing lead times.”

Challenge

Before they adopted Model-Based Design, Bombardier followed a traditional waterfall workflow for control software development: One team was responsible for the requirements and design, which would be handed off to a second team for implementation via traditional hand coding, which is both manual and error prone. Most testing was done in a hardware-in-the-loop environment followed by a combined hardware/software system test, and some tests had to be conducted on the train itself. If errors are discovered late in this process, it can lead to weeks or even months of costly rework and delays.

Bombardier needed an approach that would enable them to avoid project delays and cost overruns due to ambiguous requirements, complex standards, and the inability to test designs until late in the development process.

Recognizing that adopting a new methodology would be organizationally challenging, they wanted to smooth the transition by providing engineering teams with appropriate support.

Solution

Bombardier adopted Model-Based Design and worked with MathWorks to facilitate the transition to the new development approach.

Bombardier engineering teams attended seminars conducted by MathWorks engineers that focused on detecting and correcting design errors through simulation. Following these sessions, Bombardier engineers worked with MathWorks support on a pilot to demonstrate the concept in an actual customer delivery project.

In one instance, the team created an electrical and control system model in MATLAB and Simulink. By simulating the model, they identified an electrical fault that typically would not have been found until a combined system test. The success of the modeling, which had an ROI of more than 100%, helped reduce organizational resistance to the new development approach.

In the new workflow, Bombardier engineers configure and adapt control models provided in Simulink to satisfy customer-defined requirements captured in IBM® Rational® DOORS® or Microsoft® Word documents. They then create electrical hardware (plant) models of the propulsion systems and run closed-loop simulations to validate requirements, verify functionality, and assess controller performance.

They generate C code from their controller models using Embedded Coder®. After compiling the code and deploying it to an embedded target, they run hardware-in-the-loop (HIL) tests to verify the real-time operation of the software. HIL tests are followed by tests on propulsion hardware in the lab and then on the actual train.

Bombardier engineers are working to extend their workflow to include software-in-the-loop (SIL) and processor-in-the-loop (PIL) testing and use of IEC Certification Kit to streamline EN 50128/EN 50657 certification.

Results

  • Costs reduced by 45%, lead time by 35%. “For one of our first projects with Model-Based Design, we developed a complex new function requested by a customer,” says Lindskog. “Compared with using our traditional approach, with Model-Based Design we required far fewer design, implementation, test, and documentation iterations, resulting in a cost reduction of 45% and a lead time reduction of 35%. The customer was deeply impressed by receiving an extremely challenging function that worked flawlessly from start.”
  • Adoption of new workflow streamlined. “Introducing a new way of working is often more complex than you expect it to be,” says Lindskog. “Having technical engagement from MathWorks helped not only to address technical issues but also to ensure that the approach we were taking aligned with industry best practices.”
  • Code implementation delays minimized. “Having separate teams for design and implementation led to misunderstandings; it also meant we faced delays of two weeks or more if the implementation team was busy,” notes Pontus Jernberg, software application engineer at Bombardier Transportation. “Now we work as one team, and implementation is practically immediate because we generate code with Embedded Coder.”