Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
Dokumenttyp
- Konferenzveröffentlichung (409)
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (37)
- Buch (Monographie) (18)
- Teil eines Buches (Kapitel) (9)
- Arbeitspapier (8)
- Bericht (1)
Sprache
- Englisch (482) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Conference (279)
- Konferenz (277)
- Germany (178)
- Deutschland (174)
- Unfall (163)
- Accident (162)
- Injury (116)
- Verletzung (116)
- Safety (102)
- Sicherheit (97)
- Unfallrekonstruktion (80)
- Analyse (math) (69)
- Analysis (math) (68)
- Bewertung (67)
- Schweregrad (Unfall, Verletzung) (66)
- Evaluation (assessment) (65)
- Vehicle (65)
- Fahrzeug (64)
- Severity (accid, injury) (64)
- Statistics (64)
- Fußgänger (63)
- Pedestrian (63)
- Statistik (63)
- Simulation (59)
- Tödlicher Unfall (59)
- Fatality (58)
- Anfahrversuch (56)
- injury) (54)
- Reconstruction (accid) (53)
- Verletzung) (52)
- Datenbank (51)
- Schweregrad (Unfall (51)
- Severity (accid (49)
- Car (46)
- Datenerfassung (46)
- Collision (45)
- Data acquisition (45)
- Europa (45)
- Europe (45)
- Impact test (veh) (45)
- Unfallverhütung (45)
- Accident prevention (44)
- Test method (44)
- Zusammenstoß (43)
- Prüfverfahren (42)
- On the spot accident investigation (41)
- Untersuchung am Unfallort (40)
- Active safety system (38)
- Cause (38)
- Frontalzusammenstoß (38)
- Ursache (38)
- Radfahrer (37)
- Test (37)
- Aktives Sicherheitssystem (36)
- Data bank (36)
- Fahrerassistenzsystem (36)
- Head on collision (36)
- Cyclist (35)
- Versuch (35)
- Driver (34)
- Driver assistance system (34)
- Fahrer (34)
- Passives Sicherheitssystem (34)
- Passive safety system (31)
- Geschwindigkeit (30)
- Method (30)
- Verfahren (30)
- Leistungsfähigkeit (allg) (29)
- Speed (29)
- Accident reconstruction (27)
- Insasse (27)
- Motorcyclist (27)
- Motorradfahrer (27)
- Efficiency (25)
- Anthropometric dummy (24)
- Dummy (23)
- Risiko (23)
- Vehicle occupant (23)
- Behaviour (22)
- Measurement (22)
- Verhalten (22)
- PKW (21)
- Pkw (21)
- Risk (21)
- Child (20)
- Improvement (20)
- Kind (20)
- Messung (20)
- Risikobewertung (20)
- Verbesserung (20)
- Brustkorb (19)
- Forschungsarbeit (19)
- Risk assessment (19)
- Seitlicher Zusammenstoß (19)
- Biomechanics (18)
- Biomechanik (18)
- Head (18)
- Kopf (18)
- Lorry (18)
- Motorrad (18)
- Rechenmodell (18)
- Sicherheitsgurt (18)
- Side impact (18)
- Alte Leute (17)
- Interview (17)
- Kompatibilität (17)
- Mathematical model (17)
- Motorcycle (17)
- Research project (17)
- Thorax (17)
- Benutzung (16)
- Compatibility (16)
- Development (16)
- Entwicklung (16)
- Old people (16)
- Prevention (16)
- Use (16)
- Berechnung (15)
- Deformation (15)
- Prognose (15)
- Safety belt (15)
- Accident rate (14)
- Auffahrunfall (14)
- Calculation (14)
- Leg (human) (14)
- Rear end collision (14)
- Transport infrastructure (14)
- Verformung (14)
- Airbag (13)
- Belastung (13)
- Database (13)
- Load (13)
- Unfallhäufigkeit (13)
- Bremsung (12)
- EU (12)
- Fahrzeugsitz (12)
- Fehler (12)
- Forecast (12)
- International (12)
- Lkw (12)
- Modification (12)
- Sensor (12)
- Standardisierung (12)
- Vehicle regulations (12)
- Überschlagen (12)
- Braking (11)
- Cost benefit analysis (11)
- Digital model (11)
- Error (11)
- Human factor (11)
- Interior (veh) (11)
- Menschlicher Faktor (11)
- Numerisches Modell (11)
- Research report (11)
- Schutzhelm (11)
- Seat (veh) (11)
- Technische Vorschriften (Kraftfahrzeug) (11)
- Verhütung (11)
- Verkehrsinfrastruktur (11)
- Verminderung (11)
- Veränderung (11)
- Wirtschaftlichkeitsrechnung (11)
- Antikollisionssystem (10)
- Bein (menschl) (10)
- Bemessung (10)
- Crash helmet (10)
- Decrease (10)
- Design (overall design) (10)
- Fahrzeuginnenraum (10)
- Gesetzgebung (10)
- Impact test (10)
- Krankenhaus (10)
- Legislation (10)
- Overturning (veh) (10)
- Politik (10)
- Tunnel (10)
- USA (10)
- Weather (10)
- Wirbelsäule (10)
- Age (9)
- Air bag (restraint system) (9)
- Alter (9)
- Autobahn (9)
- Automatisch (9)
- Collision avoidance system (9)
- Erste Hilfe (9)
- Fahranfänger (9)
- Fahrzeugführung (9)
- Front (9)
- Hospital (9)
- Japan (9)
- Knotenpunkt (9)
- Policy (9)
- Recently qualified driver (9)
- Standardization (9)
- Witterung (9)
- Automatic (8)
- Autonomous driving (8)
- Bridge (8)
- Brücke (8)
- Driver information (8)
- Driving (veh) (8)
- Drunkenness (8)
- Durability (8)
- Forschungsbericht (8)
- Fracture (bone) (8)
- Halswirbel (8)
- Knee (human) (8)
- Knochenbruch (8)
- Oberflächentextur (8)
- Perception (8)
- Shock (8)
- Surface texture (8)
- Technologie (8)
- Technology (8)
- Trunkenheit (8)
- Vereinigtes Königreich (8)
- Verkehrsteilnehmer (8)
- Wahrnehmung (8)
- Austria (7)
- Cervical vertebrae (7)
- Dauerhaftigkeit (7)
- Detection (7)
- Fahrstabilität (7)
- First aid (7)
- Human body (7)
- Impact sled (7)
- Impact study (7)
- Menschlicher Körper (7)
- Motorway (7)
- Norm (tech) (7)
- Ort (Position) (7)
- Road user (7)
- Schlag (7)
- Sichtbarkeit (7)
- Specification (standard) (7)
- Specifications (7)
- Spinal column (7)
- Straßenentwurf (7)
- Unterhaltung (7)
- Vehicle handling (7)
- Sichtbarkeit (7)
- Österreich (7)
- Adolescent (6)
- Aufprallschlitten (6)
- Ausrüstung (6)
- Automatische Notbremsung (6)
- Autonomes Fahren (6)
- China (6)
- Correlation (math, stat) (6)
- Deformierbare Barriere (Anpralltest) (6)
- Distraction (6)
- Driver training (6)
- Emission (6)
- Environment (6)
- Equipment (6)
- Fahrausbildung (6)
- Fahrerinformation (6)
- Fire (6)
- Highway design (6)
- India (6)
- Indien (6)
- Jugendlicher (6)
- Junction (6)
- Knie (menschl) (6)
- Location (6)
- Maintenance (6)
- Portugal (6)
- Probability (6)
- Reaction (human) (6)
- Reaktionsverhalten (6)
- Richtlinien (6)
- Road traffic (6)
- Schweden (6)
- Software (6)
- Steifigkeit (6)
- Stiffness (6)
- Surfacing (6)
- Vorn (6)
- Wahrscheinlichkeit (6)
- Wirksamkeitsuntersuchung (6)
- Abbiegen (5)
- Ablenkung (psychol) (5)
- Activity report (5)
- Analyse (Math) (5)
- Angle (5)
- Autonomous emergency braking (5)
- Bicycle (5)
- Body (car) (5)
- Classification (5)
- Condition survey (5)
- Damage (5)
- Deformable barrier (impact test) (5)
- Delivery vehicle (5)
- Detektion (5)
- Echtzeit (5)
- Eins (5)
- Einstellung (psychol) (5)
- Electronic stability program (5)
- Emergency (5)
- Ergonomics (5)
- Fahrrad (5)
- Fahrsimulator (5)
- Finite element method (5)
- Frau (5)
- Gefahrenabwehr (5)
- Gewicht (5)
- Intelligent transport system (5)
- Kamera (5)
- Karosserie (5)
- Kontrolle (5)
- Korrelation (math, stat) (5)
- LKW (5)
- Landstraße (5)
- Lebenszyklus (5)
- Lärm (5)
- Noise (5)
- Notfall (5)
- One (5)
- Post crash (5)
- Rehabilitation (5)
- Reproducibility (5)
- Reproduzierbarkeit (5)
- Rigid pavement (5)
- Rural road (5)
- Sachschaden (5)
- Schutzeinrichtung (5)
- Security (5)
- Simulator (driving) (5)
- Straßenverkehrsrecht (5)
- United Kingdom (5)
- Weight (5)
- Winkel (5)
- Zustandsbewertung (5)
- Abdomen (4)
- Absorption (4)
- Anti locking device (4)
- Attitude (psychol) (4)
- Betonstraße (Oberbau) (4)
- Bremse (4)
- Bus (4)
- Camera (4)
- Coefficient of friction (4)
- Collision test (veh) (4)
- Communication (4)
- Contact (tyre road) (4)
- Crashtest (4)
- Decision process (4)
- Decke (Straße) (4)
- Dynamics (4)
- Dynamik (4)
- Eigenschaft (4)
- Electric vehicle (4)
- Elektrofahrzeug (4)
- Elektronisches Stabilitätsprogramm (4)
- Enforcement (law) (4)
- Entscheidungsprozess (4)
- Erziehung (4)
- Estimation (4)
- Fahrdatenschreiber (4)
- Fahrgeschicklichkeit (4)
- Feuer (4)
- France (4)
- Frankreich (4)
- Frequency (4)
- Führerschein (4)
- Gesetzesdurchführung (4)
- Highway (4)
- In situ (4)
- Information (4)
- Klassifizierung (4)
- Kommunikation (4)
- Kraftfahrzeug (4)
- Medical aspects (4)
- Medizinische Gesichtspunkte (4)
- Messgerät (4)
- Methode der finiten Elemente (4)
- Occupant (veh) (4)
- Official approval (4)
- Organisation (4)
- Planning (4)
- Planung (4)
- Properties (4)
- Quality (4)
- Quality assurance (4)
- Qualität (4)
- Qualitätssicherung (4)
- Real time (4)
- Regression analysis (4)
- Regressionsanalyse (4)
- Rehabilitation (road user) (4)
- Reibungsbeiwert (4)
- Road construction (4)
- Road network (4)
- Safety fence (4)
- Schallpegel (4)
- Seite (4)
- Severity (acid (4)
- Sound level (4)
- Straße (4)
- Straßennetz (4)
- Surveillance (4)
- Sweden (4)
- Temperatur (4)
- Traffic (4)
- Traffic engineering (4)
- Traffic regulations (4)
- Umwelt (4)
- Unfallfolgemaßnahme (4)
- Unterleib (4)
- Verkehr (4)
- Wet road (4)
- Woman (4)
- Accuracy (3)
- Air pollution (3)
- Antiblockiereinrichtung (3)
- Apparatus (measuring) (3)
- Arzneimittel (3)
- Attention (3)
- Aufmerksamkeit (3)
- Bau (3)
- Bauwerksmonitoring (3)
- Bearing capacity (3)
- Befreiung (Bergung) (3)
- Bein (3)
- Beton (3)
- Blickfeld (3)
- Boden (3)
- Brake (3)
- Brücken Management System (3)
- Capacity (road, footway) (3)
- Carbon dioxide (3)
- Coach (3)
- Concrete (3)
- Construction (3)
- Cost (3)
- Crash Test (3)
- Crash test (3)
- Czech Republic (3)
- Data base (3)
- Deicing (3)
- Digitale Bildverarbeitung (3)
- Driving aptitude (3)
- Education (3)
- Effectiveness (3)
- Empfindlichkeit (3)
- Entdeckung (3)
- Ergonomie (3)
- Event data recorder (road vehicle) (3)
- Extrication (3)
- Fahrbahnüberquerung (3)
- Fahrtauglichkeit (3)
- Field of vision (3)
- Frequenz (3)
- Griffigkeit (3)
- Hinten (3)
- Information documentation (3)
- Intelligentes Transportsystem (3)
- Intersection (3)
- Jahreszeit (3)
- Kapazität (Straße) (3)
- Kleidung (3)
- Kontakt Reifen Straße (3)
- Korea (Süd) (Demokratische Republik) (3)
- Kosten (3)
- Kunststoff (3)
- Lenken (Fahrzeug) (3)
- Level of service (3)
- Lieferfahrzeug (3)
- Life cycle (3)
- Luftverunreinigung (3)
- Main road (3)
- Man (3)
- Mann (3)
- Medication (3)
- Medizinische Untersuchung (3)
- Mobility (3)
- Mobilität (3)
- Nasse Straße (3)
- Oberbau (3)
- Overlapping (3)
- Passenger (3)
- Pavement (3)
- Plastic material (3)
- Prototyp (3)
- Prototype (3)
- Rear (3)
- Reifen (3)
- Reisebus (3)
- Republic of Korea (3)
- Run off the road (accid) (3)
- Season (3)
- Sensitivity (3)
- Skidding resistance (3)
- Skill (road user) (3)
- Soil (3)
- Spain (3)
- Spanien (3)
- Steering (process) (3)
- Straßenverkehr (3)
- Structural health monitoring (3)
- Sustainability (3)
- Telematics (3)
- Telematik (3)
- Temperature (3)
- Theorie (3)
- Theory (3)
- Time (3)
- Traffic control (3)
- Traffic count (3)
- Tragfähigkeit (3)
- Trend (stat) (3)
- Tschechische Republik (3)
- Tyre (3)
- United kingdom (3)
- Unterfahrschutz (3)
- Verkehrserhebung (3)
- Verkehrsqualität (3)
- Verkehrssteuerung (3)
- Verschiebung (3)
- Versuchspuppe (3)
- Visual display (3)
- Vorne (3)
- Windschutzscheibe (3)
- Zeit (3)
- Abfluss (2)
- Abkommen von der Fahrbahn (Unfall) (2)
- Ablenkung (2)
- Abstandsregeltempomat (2)
- Accompanied driving (2)
- Adult (2)
- Advanced driver assistance system (2)
- Anthropmetric dummy (2)
- Asphaltstraße (Oberbau) (2)
- Auftaumittel (2)
- Australia (2)
- Australien (2)
- Autonomes Fahrzeug (2)
- Autonomous vehicle (2)
- Battery (2)
- Baumusterzulassung (2)
- Begleitetes Fahren (2)
- Behinderter (2)
- Beinahe Unfall (2)
- Bicyclist (2)
- Bildschirm (2)
- Blutkreislauf (2)
- Brand (2)
- Bremsweg (2)
- Bridge deck (2)
- Bridge management system (2)
- Bruch (mech) (2)
- Calibration (2)
- Circulation (blood) (2)
- Climate change (2)
- Clothing (2)
- Compliance (specif) (2)
- Comprehension (2)
- Compression (2)
- Continuous (2)
- Cooperative intelligent transport system (2)
- Crash victim (2)
- Cross roads (2)
- Crossing the road (2)
- Cycle track (2)
- Cycling (2)
- Data processing (2)
- Data transmission (telecom) (2)
- Datenbasis (2)
- Datenverarbeitung (2)
- Datenübertragung (telekom) (2)
- Dehnungsmessstreifen (2)
- Depth (2)
- Deterioration (2)
- Deutschalnd (2)
- Diesel engine (2)
- Digital image processing (2)
- Disablement (2)
- Dreidimensional (2)
- Driving licence (2)
- Driving license (2)
- Driving test (2)
- Droge (2)
- Drugs (2)
- EU directive (2)
- EU-Richtlinie (2)
- Edge (2)
- Eichung (2)
- Eindringung (2)
- Eingabedaten (2)
- Electric bicycle (2)
- Electronic driving aid (2)
- Elektrofahrrad (2)
- Energie (2)
- Energy (2)
- Environment protection (2)
- Erwachsener (2)
- Eu (2)
- Exhaust aftertreatment (2)
- Experience (human) (2)
- Expert system (2)
- Expertensystem (2)
- Fahrbahnmarkierung (2)
- Fahrbahntafel (2)
- Fahrprüfung (2)
- Fahrstreifen (2)
- Fahrzeugteil (Sicherheit) (2)
- Fernverkehrsstraße (2)
- Festigkeit (2)
- Foot (not a measure) (2)
- Form (2)
- Fuel consumption (2)
- Fuß (2)
- Führerscheinentzug (2)
- Geländefahrzeug (2)
- Genauigkeit (2)
- Gesetzesübertretung (2)
- Government (national) (2)
- Greenhouse effect (2)
- Grenzwert (2)
- Haftung (jur) (2)
- Harmonisation (2)
- Hazard (2)
- Head restraint (2)
- Headlamp (2)
- Heavy metal (2)
- In service behavior (2)
- Incident detection (2)
- Incident management (2)
- Input data (2)
- Interface (2)
- Italien (2)
- Italy (2)
- Klimawandel (2)
- Knie (2)
- Kohlendioxid (2)
- Kontakt Reifen-Straße (2)
- Kontinuierlich (2)
- Kopfstütze (2)
- Kreuzung (2)
- Langfristig (2)
- Layout (2)
- Learning (2)
- Leuchtdichte (2)
- Liability (2)
- Limit (2)
- Long term (2)
- Luminance (2)
- Market (2)
- Markt (2)
- Medical examination (2)
- Mensch Maschine Verhältnis (2)
- Methode der finite Elemente (2)
- Mittelwert (2)
- Mobile phone (2)
- Mobiltelefon (2)
- Model (not math) (2)
- Modell (2)
- Motorisierungsgrad (2)
- Movement (2)
- Nacht (2)
- Near miss (2)
- Netherlands (2)
- Network (traffic) (2)
- Niederlande (2)
- Night (2)
- Oberfläche (2)
- Offence (2)
- Offender (2)
- Organization (association) (2)
- Output (2)
- Parken (2)
- Parking (2)
- Pavement Management System (2)
- Pavement design (2)
- Pavement management system (2)
- Penetration (2)
- Pollutant (2)
- Posture (2)
- Public transport (2)
- Radfahren (2)
- Radio (2)
- Radweg (2)
- Rain (2)
- Rear view mirror (2)
- Recidivist (2)
- Recording (2)
- Regen (2)
- Regierung (staat) (2)
- Reinforcement (in mater) (2)
- Restraint system (2)
- Risk taking (2)
- Run off (2)
- Rundfunk (2)
- Rückfalltäter (2)
- Rückspiegel (2)
- Schadstoff (2)
- Schall (2)
- Scheinwerfer (2)
- Schutz (2)
- Schwermetall (2)
- Seat belt (2)
- Service area (2)
- Service life (2)
- Side (2)
- Sociology (2)
- Sound (2)
- Soziologie (2)
- Sport utility vehicle (2)
- Spreading (2)
- Stadt (2)
- Statistical analysis (2)
- Statistische Analyse (2)
- Stochastic process (2)
- Stochastischer Prozess (2)
- Strain gauge (2)
- Straßenbau (2)
- Strength (mater) (2)
- Stress (psychol) (2)
- Störfallentdeckung (2)
- Störfallmanagement (2)
- Surface (2)
- Tank Rast Anlage (2)
- Telefon (2)
- Telekommunikation (2)
- Telephone (2)
- Three dimensional (2)
- Tiefe (2)
- Toxicity (2)
- Toxizität (2)
- Traffic lane (2)
- Traffic restraint (2)
- Treibhauseffekt (2)
- Turn (2)
- Turning (2)
- Tyre tread (2)
- Tätigkeitsbericht (2)
- Umweltschutz (2)
- Underride protection (2)
- Unfallopfer (2)
- Untersuchung am unfallort (2)
- Urban area (2)
- Vehicle ownership (2)
- Vehicle safety device (2)
- Verkehrsbeschränkung (2)
- Verkehrsnetz (2)
- Verkehrstechnik (2)
- Verkehrsverflechtung (2)
- Verständnis (2)
- Verteilung (mater) (2)
- Wasser (2)
- Water (2)
- Windscreen (veh) (2)
- Zeitreihe (stat) (2)
- Zusammendrückung (2)
- Zusammenstoss (2)
- Öffentlicher Verkehr (2)
- Überlappung (2)
- (menschl) (1)
- Abgefahrener Reifen (1)
- Ability (road user) (1)
- Abkommen von der Fahrbahn (1)
- Abnutzung (1)
- Acceleration (1)
- Acceptability (1)
- Accessibility (1)
- Accident black spot (1)
- Accident proneness (1)
- Accident severity (1)
- Achslast (1)
- Active safety (1)
- Active safety system; Automatic; Brake; Car; Collision avoidance system; Conference; Driver assistance system; Germany; Impact test (veh); Rear end collision; Severity (accid (1)
- Adaptation (psychol) (1)
- Adaptive cruise control (1)
- Adaptive cruise controll (1)
- Administration (1)
- Advanced vehicle control systems (1)
- Aged people (1)
- Aggression (psycho) (1)
- Aggression (psychol) (1)
- Air quality management (1)
- Air traffic control (1)
- Air transport (1)
- Airbag (restraint system) (1)
- Aktive Sicherheit (1)
- Alcolock (1)
- Alternative (1)
- Analyse (1)
- Analyses (math) (1)
- Anhänger (1)
- Ankündigung (1)
- Anordnung (1)
- Anpassung (psychol) (1)
- Anthropometrie (1)
- Anthropometry (1)
- Antiblockiersystem (1)
- Antikollisisonssystem (1)
- Apparatus (measurement) (1)
- Arbeitsgruppe (1)
- Arm (human) (1)
- Arm (menschl) (1)
- Articulated vehicle (1)
- Asset Management (1)
- Asset management (1)
- Asset management system (1)
- Atives Sicherheitssystem (1)
- Audit (1)
- Auffharunfall (1)
- Aufzeichnung (1)
- Aufzeichung (1)
- Augenbewegungen (1)
- Ausdehnung (mater) (1)
- Automotive Engineering (1)
- Autonomous emerhency braking (1)
- Autotür (1)
- Average (1)
- Axle load (1)
- Back (human) (1)
- Batterie (1)
- Baustelle (1)
- Baustoff (1)
- Bauweise (1)
- Beanspruchung (1)
- Bein [menschl] (1)
- Belohnung (Anreiz) (1)
- Bemessung des Straßenoberbaus (1)
- Benchmark (1)
- Bepflanzung (1)
- Berechnung d Straßenoberbaus (1)
- Beschleunigung (1)
- Bestrafung (1)
- Bevölkerung (1)
- Bewehrung (1)
- Bindemittel (1)
- Binder (1)
- Bitumen (1)
- Bituminous mixture (1)
- Bituminöses Mischgut (1)
- Black ice (1)
- Blind spot (veh) (1)
- Blood alcohol content (1)
- Blutalkoholgehalt (1)
- Bone (1)
- Brake light (1)
- Braking distance (1)
- Breaking (1)
- Breite (1)
- Bremslicht (1)
- Bridges (1)
- Budget (1)
- Bumper (1)
- Cadaver (1)
- Car door (1)
- Car park (1)
- Carriageway (1)
- Carriageway marking (1)
- Catalytic converter (1)
- Cervical vertebrae; Conference; Evaluation (assessment); Injury; Spinal column; Test (1)
- Chassis (1)
- Chest (1)
- Clay (1)
- Coefficient (1)
- Cognitive impairment (1)
- Cold (1)
- Collisison avoidance system (1)
- Colthing (1)
- Compatiblity (1)
- Computation (1)
- Concentration (chem) (1)
- Conference; Germany; Injury; Medical examination; Spinal column; X ray (1)
- Confiscation (driving licence) (1)
- Confiscation (driving license) (1)
- Congestion (traffic) (1)
- Construction method (1)
- Construction site (1)
- Consumer protection (1)
- Contact (tyre (1)
- Control (1)
- Cooling (mater) (1)
- Correlation (1)
- Correlation (math (1)
- Cracking (1)
- Critical path method (1)
- Crossing the road (pedestrian) (1)
- Damping (1)
- Data basis (1)
- Data collection (1)
- Datenübertragung (Telekom) (1)
- Dauer (1)
- Day (24 hour period) (1)
- Daylight (1)
- Decke [Straße] (1)
- Deformable barrier (Impact test) (1)
- Deformable barrier system (impact test) (1)
- Deformierte Barriere (Anpralltest) (1)
- Demand (econ) (1)
- Demografie (1)
- Demography (1)
- Density (1)
- Detection response task (1)
- Deutschland ; Konferenz (1)
- Diagnostik (1)
- Dichte (1)
- Dieselmotor (1)
- Diffusion (1)
- Digital computer (1)
- Digitalrechner (1)
- Dimension (1)
- Dispersion (stat) (1)
- Displacement (1)
- Disstraction (1)
- Distribution (gen) (1)
- Drainage (1)
- Driver (veh) (1)
- Driver information system (1)
- Driving aid (electronic) (1)
- Dränasphalt (1)
- Dtetection (1)
- Durchsichtigkeit (1)
- Dynamic penetration test (1)
- Dynamo (1)
- Dämpfung (1)
- Earthworks (1)
- Economic efficiency (1)
- Economics of transport (1)
- Ejection (1)
- Elastizitätsmodul (1)
- Electronics (1)
- Elektronik (1)
- Elektronische Deichsel (1)
- Elektronisches Stabilitätsprogram (1)
- Emergency medical aid (1)
- Engine capacity (1)
- Enteisung (1)
- Entgleisung (Zug) (1)
- Entwässerung (1)
- Erdarbeiten (1)
- Erfahrung (menschl) (1)
- Ermüdung (mater) (1)
- Ersatzfahraufgabe (1)
- European New Car Assessment Programme (1)
- Evaluation (Assessment) (1)
- Event data recorder (Road vehicle) (1)
- Expansion (1)
- Experimental road (1)
- Expert interview (1)
- Expressway (1)
- Eye movement (1)
- Face (human) (1)
- Facility (1)
- Fahrassistenzsystem (1)
- Fahrbahn (1)
- Fahrdynamik (1)
- Fahrererfahrung (1)
- Fahrerinformationen (1)
- Fahrerinformationssystem (1)
- Fahrleistung (1)
- Fahrstreifenwechsel (1)
- Fahrwerk (1)
- Fahrzeugbeleuchtung (1)
- Fahrzeugdach (1)
- Fahrzeugflotte (1)
- Fahrzeugrückhaltesystem (1)
- Fahrzeugsicherheit (1)
- Failure (1)
- Fatigue (human) (1)
- Fatigue (mater) (1)
- Fear (1)
- Fein (mater) (1)
- Feinstaub (1)
- Fence (1)
- Fernverkehrsstrasse (1)
- Field test (1)
- Financing (1)
- Finanzierung (1)
- Fine (mater) (1)
- Finland (1)
- Finnland (1)
- Fleet of vehicles (1)
- Flexible pavement (1)
- Flooding (1)
- Flugsicherung (1)
- Freeway (1)
- Freight transport (1)
- Friction (1)
- Fuel tank (1)
- Fuge (1)
- Fugenfüllung (1)
- Functional safety (1)
- Funktionale Sicherheit (1)
- Furcht (1)
- Future transport mode (1)
- Fußgängerbereich (1)
- Führerschein Punktesystem (1)
- Gap acceptance (1)
- Gas (1)
- Gefahr (1)
- Gelenkfahrzeug (1)
- Geografisches Information System (1)
- Geographical information system (1)
- Geomembran (1)
- Geomembrane (1)
- Geometry (shape) (1)
- Geotextil (1)
- Geotextile (1)
- Geradeausverkehr (1)
- Geschwindigkeitsbeschränkung (1)
- Gesicht (1)
- Gestaltung (1)
- Gesundheit (1)
- Glatteis (1)
- Great Britain (1)
- Grenzfläche (1)
- Ground water (1)
- Group analysis (test) (1)
- Großbritannien (1)
- Grundwasser (1)
- Güterverkehr (1)
- Harmonisierung (1)
- Harmonization (1)
- Head (human) (1)
- Health (1)
- Hearing (1)
- Height (1)
- Herausschleudern (1)
- Herstellung (1)
- Higway design (1)
- Hip (human) (1)
- Homogeneity (1)
- Homogenität (1)
- Hospitsl (1)
- Hubraum (1)
- Häufigkeit (1)
- Höhe (1)
- Hörvermögen (1)
- Hüfte (1)
- Hüfte (menschl) (1)
- Illness (1)
- Image analysis (1)
- Image generation (1)
- Image processing (1)
- Immission (1)
- Impact (collision) (1)
- Impact test (crash) (1)
- In Bewegung (1)
- Increase (1)
- Inertia reel safety belt (1)
- Infotainment System (1)
- Infotainment system (1)
- Injury) (1)
- Installation (1)
- Intelligentes Transport System (1)
- Intelligentes Verkehrssystem (1)
- Interactive model (1)
- Interaktives Modell (1)
- Inventar (1)
- Inventory (1)
- Ireland (1)
- Irland (1)
- Itinerary (1)
- Jahr (1)
- Joint (structural) (1)
- Klassifikation (1)
- Kleintransporter (1)
- Knochen (1)
- Koeffizient (1)
- Kognitive Aufgabenanforderung (1)
- Kognitive Beeinträchtigung (1)
- Kolmatierung (1)
- Kompatiblität (1)
- Konzentration (1)
- Kopf (menschl) (1)
- Korea (Süd) (1)
- Korn (1)
- Kornverteilung (1)
- Korrelation (math (1)
- Korrelation [math (1)
- Korrelation(Math (1)
- Kosten Nutzen Vergleich (1)
- Kraftstofftank (1)
- Kraftstoffverbrauch (1)
- Krankheit (1)
- Kreisverkehrsplatz (1)
- Kälte (1)
- Körperhaltung (1)
- Körperstellung (1)
- Kühlung (mater) (1)
- Laboratorium (1)
- Laboratory (not an organization) (1)
- Laborexperiment (1)
- Lane changing (1)
- Lap strap (1)
- Laser (1)
- Lateral (1)
- Lateral collision (1)
- Layer (1)
- Lebensdauer (1)
- Left turn (1)
- Leichnam (1)
- Leistungsfähigkeit (Allg.) (1)
- Length (1)
- Lernen (1)
- Lifecycle (1)
- Links (1)
- Literaturanalyse (1)
- Literature review (1)
- Luftreinhaltung (1)
- Lufttransport (1)
- Länge (1)
- Lärmschutzwand (1)
- Maintenance management (1)
- Malaysia (1)
- Man-machine interface (1)
- Manufacture (1)
- Massenunfall (1)
- Material (constr) (1)
- Materialveraenderung (allg) (1)
- Materialveränderung (allg) (1)
- Mathematical Model (1)
- Matrix (1)
- Mean (math) (1)
- Mensch-Maschine-Interaktion (1)
- Mensch-Maschine-Schnittstelle (1)
- Merging (1)
- Merging traffic (1)
- Text (1)
- Mesurement (1)
- Metal bridge (1)
- Mix design (1)
- Modulus of elasticity (1)
- Montage (1)
- Moped (1)
- Motor (1)
- Moving (1)
- Multiple collision (1)
- Müdigkeit (1)
- Nachfrage (1)
- Nachhaltige Entwicklung (1)
- Nachhaltigkeit (1)
- Nachricht (1)
- Nasse Strasse (1)
- Netzplantechnik (1)
- Neural network (1)
- Neuronales Netz (1)
- Nigeria (1)
- Nitric acid (1)
- Nitrogen oxide (1)
- Noise barrier (1)
- Non destructive testing (1)
- Nordamerika (1)
- North America (1)
- Norway (1)
- Norwegen (1)
- Nummer (1)
- Nutzwertanalyse (1)
- OECD (1)
- Occupant (1)
- Offset impact test (1)
- On the left (1)
- On the right (1)
- On the scene accident investigation (1)
- On the spot investigation (1)
- Optimum (1)
- Optische Anzeige (1)
- Organization (1)
- Orthotrope Platte (1)
- Orthotropic plate (1)
- Overtaking (1)
- Overturning (1)
- Oxygen (1)
- Ozon (1)
- Ozone (1)
- PVC (1)
- Padding (safety) (1)
- Parkfläche (1)
- Particle (1)
- Particle size distribution (1)
- Particulate matter (1)
- Partnerschaft (1)
- Partnership (1)
- Peak hour (1)
- Peat (1)
- Pedestrian precinct (1)
- Pelvis (1)
- Penalty (1)
- Personal (1)
- Personnel (1)
- Pfahl (1)
- Pfosten (1)
- Pile (1)
- Platooning (electronic) (1)
- Platte (1)
- Point demerit system (1)
- Poland (1)
- Pole (1)
- Polen (1)
- Police (1)
- Politics (1)
- Polizei (1)
- Pollution (1)
- Pollution concentration (1)
- Polyvinylchloride (1)
- Population (1)
- Porous asphalt (1)
- Portable (1)
- Position (1)
- Pregnancy (1)
- Preloading (soil) (1)
- Prestressed (1)
- Prestressed concrete (1)
- Probe (1)
- Productivity (1)
- Protective helmet (1)
- Provisorisch (1)
- Prüefverfahren (1)
- Pssives Sicherheitssystem (1)
- Psychological aspects (1)
- Psychologische Gesichtspunkte (1)
- QAccident (1)
- Quality management system (1)
- Qualitätsmanagementsystem (1)
- Rail bound transport (1)
- Rail traffic (1)
- Rammsondierung (1)
- Reaction (chem.) (1)
- Reaktion (chem) (1)
- Real-time (1)
- Rechts (1)
- Rechtsübertreter (1)
- Rechtübertreter (1)
- Reconstruction [accid] (1)
- Reduction (decrease) (1)
- Reflectivity (1)
- Reflectorized material (1)
- Reflexionsgrad (1)
- Reflexstoffe (1)
- Regional planning (1)
- Regionalplanung (1)
- Rehabilitation (Road user) (1)
- Reibung (1)
- Reifenprofil (1)
- Reinforcement (1)
- Reiseweg (1)
- Republic of Corea (1)
- Research (1)
- Research projekt (1)
- Residential area (1)
- Resilience (1)
- Resilienz (1)
- Resuscitation (1)
- Reversing (veh) (1)
- Reward (1)
- Rib (1)
- Richtlinie (1)
- Rinanalyse (1)
- Rippe (menschl) (1)
- Risikoverhalten (1)
- Rissbildung (1)
- Road (1)
- Road Construction (1)
- Road construction site (1)
- Road heating (1)
- Road marking (1)
- Road transport (1)
- Roadbase (1)
- Roadside (1)
- Robot (1)
- Roboter (1)
- Roll over (veh) (1)
- Rolling resistance (1)
- Rollwiderstand (1)
- Roof (veh) (1)
- Rotation (1)
- Roundabout (1)
- Rsk (1)
- Rupture (1)
- Röntgenstrahlung (1)
- Rücken (1)
- Rücksichtslosigkeit (1)
- Rückwärtsfahren (1)
- SAE Level (1)
- Safety glass (1)
- Safety harness (1)
- Safety system (1)
- Saftey (1)
- Salpetersäure (1)
- Sample (mater) (1)
- Sample (stat) (1)
- Sauerstoff (1)
- Schicht (1)
- Schienentransport (1)
- Schienenverkehr (1)
- Schleudertrauma (1)
- Schnittstelle (1)
- Schulter (1)
- Schwangerschaft (1)
- Schweiz (1)
- Schweregrad (UNfall (1)
- Schweregrad (Unfall, Verletzung (1)
- Schweregrad /Unfall (1)
- Schätzung (1)
- Sealing compound (1)
- Seat (1)
- Seat harness (1)
- Sensors (1)
- Settlement (1)
- Setzung (1)
- Severity (accid, injuy) (1)
- Shape (1)
- Shoulder (human) (1)
- Sicherheitsglas (1)
- Sicherheitspolsterung (1)
- Significance (1)
- Signifikanz (1)
- Silting (1)
- Size and weight regulations (1)
- Slab (1)
- Social factors (1)
- Soziale Faktoren (1)
- Spannbeton (1)
- Specification (standard ) (1)
- Spectrum (1)
- Speed limit (1)
- Speed) (1)
- Spektrum (1)
- Spinal calum (1)
- Sri Lanka (1)
- Stadardization (1)
- Stadtplanung (1)
- Staggered junction (1)
- Stahl (1)
- Stahlbrücke (1)
- Stand der Technik (Bericht) (1)
- Standard (1)
- Standard test run (1)
- Standardabweichung (1)
- Stapedius reflex (1)
- Stapediusreflex (1)
- Stat) (1)
- State of the art report (1)
- Statistik (math) (1)
- Steel (1)
- Stichprobe (1)
- Stickoxid (1)
- Stopping distance (1)
- Stoßstange (1)
- Straight ahead (traffic) (1)
- Strasse (1)
- Straßenheizung (1)
- Straßenseitenfläche (1)
- Straßentransport (1)
- Strength ; Tension (1)
- Stress (1)
- Stress (psycho) (1)
- Subsoil (1)
- Surrogate driving set-up (1)
- Switzerland (1)
- Systemanalyse (1)
- Systems analysis (1)
- Tactile perception (1)
- Tag (24 Stunden) (1)
- Tageslicht (1)
- Taktiles Signal (1)
- Technische Vorschriften (1)
- Telecommunication (1)
- Telecomunication (1)
- Temperature measurement (1)
- Temperaturmessung (1)
- Temporary (1)
- Tension (1)
- Terrorism (1)
- Terrorismus (1)
- Test procedure (1)
- Thailand (1)
- Ton (Gestein) (1)
- Torf (1)
- Toter Winkel (1)
- Town planning (1)
- Tracking task (1)
- Trackingaufgabe (1)
- Traffic Engineering (1)
- Traffic concentration (1)
- Traffic regulation (1)
- Tragbar (1)
- Tragschicht (1)
- Train (1)
- Transparent (1)
- Transport (1)
- Transport mode (1)
- Transport operator (1)
- Transportunternehmen (1)
- Traveler (1)
- Two dimensional (1)
- Typenzulassung (1)
- Underride prevention (1)
- Unfallfolgephase (1)
- Unfallneigung (1)
- Unfallrate (1)
- Unfallrekonsruktion (1)
- Unfallschwerpunkt (1)
- Unfallverhuetung (1)
- Unfallverhütug (1)
- Ungeschützter Verkehrsteilnehmer (1)
- United Kindom (1)
- Untergrund (1)
- Untersuchung am Umfallort (1)
- Usa (1)
- Value analysis (1)
- Variable message signs (1)
- Variance analysis (1)
- Varianzanalyse (1)
- Vegetation (1)
- Vehicle lighting (1)
- Vehicle mile (1)
- Vehicle regulation (1)
- Vehicle restraint system (1)
- Vehicle safety (1)
- Veletzung) (1)
- Veraenderung (1)
- Verbraucherschutz (1)
- Vereinigtes Königreichl (1)
- Verfahen (1)
- Verfahren ; Verkehrsinfrastruktur (1)
- Vergrößerung (1)
- Verkehrsmittel (1)
- Verkehrsspitze (1)
- Verkehrsstauung (1)
- Verkehrsstärke (1)
- Verkehrswirtschaft (1)
- Vermeidung (1)
- Verschmutzung (1)
- Versetzte Kreuzung (1)
- Verstärkung (1)
- Verstärkung (Brücke) (1)
- Versuchsstrecke (1)
- Verteilung (allg) (1)
- Verwaltung (1)
- Vibration (1)
- Video camera (1)
- Virtual reality (1)
- Virtuelle Realität (1)
- Viskosity (1)
- Viskosität (1)
- Visualisation (1)
- Visualisierung (1)
- Vorbelastung (Boden) (1)
- Vorspannung (1)
- Vulnerable road user (1)
- Warning (1)
- Wear (1)
- Wechselverkehrszeichen (1)
- Wetter (1)
- Whiplash injury (1)
- Width (1)
- Wind (1)
- Window (veh) (1)
- Winter (1)
- Wirkungsanalyse (1)
- Wirtschaftlichkeit (1)
- Wohngebiet (1)
- Women (1)
- Working group (1)
- Year (1)
- Zahl (1)
- Zeitlückenakzeptanz (1)
- Zerstörungsfreie Prüfung (1)
- Zug (Eisenbahn) (1)
- Zug (mech) (1)
- Zugänglichkeit (1)
- Zukünftiges Verkehrsmittel (1)
- Zulassung (tech) (1)
- Zusammensetzung (1)
- ZusammenstoÃüï-¿-½Ãƒ-¯Ã‚-¿Ã‚-½ (1)
- Zweidimensional (1)
- accident (1)
- aktives Sicherheitssystem (1)
- analyses (math) (1)
- ar (1)
- driving dynamics (1)
- efficiency (1)
- fatality (1)
- finite element method (1)
- head (1)
- human-machine interaction (1)
- road) (1)
- simulation (1)
- stat) (1)
- stat] (1)
- trailer (1)
- tödlicher Unfall (1)
- vehicle safety (1)
- Überdeckung (1)
- Überholen (1)
- Überschwemmung (1)
Institut
- Sonstige (337)
- Abteilung Fahrzeugtechnik (126)
- Abteilung Verhalten und Sicherheit im Verkehr (23)
- Abteilung Brücken- und Ingenieurbau (22)
- Abteilung Straßenverkehrstechnik (22)
- Abteilung Straßenbautechnik (17)
- Präsident (9)
- Stabstelle Presse und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit (6)
- Stabstelle Forschungscontrolling, Qualitätsmanagement (1)
With the aim of identifying suitable indicators and criteria for evaluating the safe human-machine interaction for SAE level 3 systems up to 60 km/h in the context of automated driving, this research project has started with a focus group interview to identify relevant publication channels and list of keywords regarding indicators for the evaluation of human-machine interaction at SAE Level 3. Based on the identified list of keywords, literature reviews have been conducted to extract relevant publications from the identified publication channels. According to the defined inclusion and exclusion criterion, 38 papers have then been selected and used for meta-analysis to study the influence of different takeover situations on takeover performances. The results of meta-analysis have indicated that drivers’ takeover performances measured by the categories of takeover time, takeover quality and subjective workload are different in static and dynamic situations. After that, expert interviews have been conducted with six international experts to help interpret the results of meta-analysis and develop checklist items. In the end, 16 checklist items assigned in six categories of system requirements have been developed and can be used by international experts to evaluate the safety of the human-machine interaction of SAE Level 3 systems up to 60 km/h in production vehicles. This checklist has been further developed to an online application, which can be used as an easy-to-implement and efficient evaluation procedure in relation to the traffic safety relevant interaction quality of the system.
Annual Report 2021
(2022)
In the Annual Report 2021, the BASt presents a selection of research activities of the year 2021.
In almost 40 contributions, projects from 5 specialist areas are presented. The spectrum of topics ranges from digital transformations in bridges and structural technology to sustainable, climate-resistant highway construction, efficient, ecological and digital traffic engineering, automated, environmentally conscious automotive engineering and the safety of all who participate in traffic.
Highlights as well as facts and figures in short and concise form complete the report.
Annual Report 2020
(2021)
The focus of the Annual Report 2020 is on selected research results from all fields of activity of the BASt.
Among the topics are for example the re-evaluation of the alcohol ban for novice drivers, the effectiveness of emergency braking systems for trucks or risk factors in motorbike traffic. ‘Talking’ workplaces will be discussed as well as the communication of automated vehicles with non-automated road users and airbag safety systems for cyclists.
The traffic barometer shows how traffic developed during the Corona pandemic. Also presented are technical developments to avoid road closures, the RITUN guide for resilient road tunnels, concrete roadway 4.0, how occupational safety demands and promotes innovation, and cross-national research cooperation in road construction.
Results on safe rural roads through suitable protective devices, on the use of digital technologies in engineering structures, on sustainable innovative replacement of concrete bridges as well as BASt activities in the BMVI Network of Experts are also presented.
Highlights as well as facts and figures complete the report.
Annual Report 2019
(2020)
In its Annual Report 2019, the BASt has compiled a selection of its research. For example, the climate impact analysis, among other things, describes an essential research focus for the federal main road network. The new information and evaluation platform "BaustellenCheck" is presented, and reports on digitization in road equipment and maintenance as well as on various activities on the innovative test site duraBASt.
The results of current simulator and test track studies are also part of the annual report, as are the results of level 3 automation studies in real road traffic with an appropriately equipped test vehicle. Approaches to solutions for the infrastructure requirements of automated driving on motorways and federal trunk roads are presented, as well as the current status of the development of regulations in the field of vehicle technology.
The BASt scientists investigated the significance of virtual reality in road safety work. Whether influencers can be used effectively in road safety communication was also considered, as well as other proposed measures to reduce the risk of accidents, especially among young novice drivers.
Highlights as well as facts and figures in short and concise form complete the report.
Eine Expertengruppe der OECD über "Großversuche für den Straßenoberbau" (Pilotland: Schweiz) hat gemeinsame Versuche zur Messung von Dehnungen in bituminös gebundenen Schichten organisiert. Die Versuche fanden im April 1984 auf der Versuchspiste von Nardo (Italien) statt, mit der Teilnahme von 10 Ländern. Alle Teilnehmer haben auf einem speziell gebauten Versuchsoberbau mit Belastung durch Lastwagen ihre eigenen messtechnischen Verfahren und ihre Geräte gebraucht. Die verwendeten Messfühler werden beschrieben und verschiedene Versuchsparameter analysiert (Eigenschaften des Oberbaus, der Belastungsfahrzeuge, Temperaturen, usw.). Beim Vergleich der Ergebnisse wurden auch analytische Methoden angewendet, um aufgrund von Feld- und Laborergebnissen die wahren Dehnungswerte zu schätzen. In Anbetracht der Streuung verschiedener Parameter können die verwendeten Methoden als zuverlässig beurteilt werden. Auf dieser Grundlage kann sich eine weitere internationale Zusammenarbeit entwickeln.
Thorax injury is one of main causes of serious injury in frontal collisions, especially for elderly car occupants. The anthropometric test device (ATD) THOR‐M provides chest deflection measurements at multiple locations, to assess the risk of thorax injury. For this purpose e, risk functions are needed that relate the potential criteria based on multipoint chest deflection measurement to in jury risk. Different thorax injury criteria and risk functions for THOR have been proposed [2‐3]. The criteria and functions are based on the traditional approach to developing injury risk functions using matched ATD and PMHS tests by relating the injury (number of fractures) to injury criteria. Regarding these studies, some limitations have been identified, in particular concerning the loading conditions of the data used (mainly 3‐point‐belt loading, high loading severity, out‐of‐date ATD versions. To extend the data set and overcome these limitations, a new approach for improved thorax injury criteria was applied within the EC‐funded project SENIORS. The new approach is based on matched frontal impact sled computer simulations with a model representing the latest THOR‐M ATD version, and matching simulations with a human body model (HBM) representing an elderly car occupant.
Technische Sicherheitsverbesserungen führen im Mensch-Maschine-System Straßenverkehr nicht zwangsläufig zu Sicherheitsgewinnen. Von den Einstellungen und Verhaltensgewohnheiten der Fahrzeugführer hängt es ab, ob vergrößerte sicherheitspotenziale adäquat genutzt oder durch Verhaltensanpassungen wieder verspielt werden. Anhand ausgewählter theoretischer Modelle und empirischer Forschungsergebnisse (OECD-Studie Behavioural adaptations to changes in the road transport system) wird dies diskutiert, und es werden Kriterien zur Vermeidung unerwünschter Adaptationen abgeleitet, die bereits bei der Planung und Realisierung technischer Verbesserungen Berücksichtigung finden sollten.
The German highway network hast o face new challenges in the near future, e.g. increasing traffic density and loads, climate change effects and new quality requirements regarding sustainability. It is necessary to come up with foresighted concepts in the present to be prepared for these challenges. Therefore it is important to adapt and enhance innovative attempts, which take changing impacts into account. One goal of these efforts is the development of adaptive systems for the provision of information and a holistic evaluation in real time. The paper describes the recent research and developments on a system for information and holistic evaluation in real time, taking into account sensor networks, evaluation procedures and their implementation in existing maintenance and inspection strategies.
Structured road markings are becoming popular as edge line on high speed roads, ensuring night time visibility (retroreflection) during rain. These markings are often also "audio-tactile": vehicles (un)intentionally driving over it may produce much more tyre/road sound, which may be observed in the vehicle but also in the vicinity. The sound increase inside the car can be considered as a positive side effect, as it alarms the driver and may be very helpful for the prevention of "doze off" traffic accidents. The sound increase perceived outside the car however, may have a positive aspect as it can warn people on the emergency lane about the approaching vehicle, but it may as well annoy people living around. A method for the assessment of the acoustic properties of audio-tactile markings has been developed. It is mainly based on the "Close Proximity" (CPX) method, an ISO method intended for the acoustic assessment of pavements. The results of measurement campaigns with CPX trailers in Belgium and Germany according to a specially designed procedure are presented. The feasibility of the method is discussed. The research has been carried out in the frame of the standardization activities of the CEN working group CEN/TC226/WG2 "Horizontal signalization".
In Europe, in situ measurements of sound reflection and airborne sound insulation of noise barriers are usually done according to CEN/TS 1793-5. This method has been improved substantially during the EU funded QUIESST collaborative project. Within the same framework, an inter-laboratory test has been carried out to assess the repeatability and reproducibility of the newly developed method when applied to real-life samples, including the effect of outdoor weather variability and sample ageing. This article presents the statistical analysis of the inter-laboratory test results, and the values of the repeatability and the reproducibility, both in one-third octave bands and for the single-number ratings. The estimated reproducibility values can be used as the extended measure of uncertainty at the 95% credibility level in compliance with the ISO GUM. The repeatability and reproducibility values associated with airborne sound insulation are also compared with the corresponding values for laboratory measurements in building acoustics and an acceptable agreement is found.
A methodology to derive precision requirements for automatic emergency braking (AEB) test procedures
(2015)
AEB Systems are becoming important to increase traffic safety. Test procedures in testing for consumer information, manufacturer self-certification and technical regulations are used to ensure a certain minimum performance of these systems. Consequently, test robustness, test efficiency and finally test cost become increasingly important. The key driver for testing effort and test costs is the required repeatable accuracy in a test design - the higher the accuracy, the higher effort and test costs. On the other hand, the performance of active safety systems depends on time discretization in the environment perception and other sub-systems: for instance, typical sensors supply information with a cycle time of 50 - 150 ms. Time discretization results in an inherent spread of system performance, even if the test conditions are perfectly equal. The proposed paper shows a methodology to derive requirements for a test setup (e.g. test repeats, use of driving robots, ...) as function of AEB system generation and rating method (e.g. Euro NCAP points awarded, pass/fail, ...). While the methodology itself is applicable to AEB pedestrian and AEB Car-Car scenarios, due to the lack of sufficient test data for AEB Car-Car, the focus of this paper is on AEB pedestrian scenarios. A simulation model for the performance of AEB Pedestrian systems allows for the systematic variation of the discretization time as well as test condition accuracy. This model is calibrated with test results of 4 production vehicles for AEB Pedestrian, all fully tested by BASt according to current Euro NCAP test protocols. Selected parameters to observe the accuracy of the test setup in case of pedestrian AEB is the calculated impact position of pedestrian on the vehicle front (as if no braking would have occurred), and the test vehicle speed accuracy. These variable was shown in real tests to be repeatable in the range of ± 5 cm and ± 0,25 km/h, respectively, with a fully robotized state of the art test setup. The sensitivity of AEB performance (measured in achieved speed reduction as well as overall rating result according to current Euro NCAP rating methods) towards discretization and the sensitivity of performance towards test accuracy then is compared to identify economic yet robust test concepts. These comparisons show that the available repeatability accuracy of current test setups is more than sufficient for today's AEB system capabilities. Time discretization problems dominate the performance spread especially in test scenarios with a limited pedestrian dummy reveal time (e.g. child behind obstruction, running adult scenarios with low car speeds). This would allow to increase test tolerances to decrease test cost. A methodology which allows to derive the required tolerances in active safety tests might be valuable especially for NCAPs of emerging countries that do not have the necessary equipment (e.g. driving robots, positioning units) available for the full-scale and high tolerance EuroNCAP active safety procedures yet still want to rate active safety systems, thus improving the global safety.
Accidents between right turning trucks and straight riding cyclists often show massive consequences. Accident severity is much higher than in other accidents. The situation is critical especially due to the fact that, in spite of the six mirrors that are mandatory for ensuring a minimum field of sight for the truck drivers, cyclists in some situations cannot be seen or are not seen by the driver. Either the cyclist is overlooked or is in a blind spot area that results from the turning manoeuvre of the truck and its articulation if it is a truck trailer or truck semitrailer combination. At present driver assistance systems are discussed that can support the driver in the turning situation by giving a warning when cyclists are riding parallel to the truck just before or in the turning manoeuvre. Such systems would generally bear a high potential to avoid accidents of right turning trucks and cyclists no matter if they ride on the road or on a parallel bicycle path. However, performance requirements for such turning assist systems or even test procedures do not exist yet. This paper describes the development of a testing method and requirements for turning assist systems for trucks. The starting point of each development of test procedures is an analysis of accident data. A general study of accident figures determines the size of the problem. In-depth accident data is evaluated case by case in order to find out which are representative critical situations. These findings serve to determine characteristic parameters (e.g. boundary conditions, trajectories of truck and cyclist, speeds during the critical situation, impact points). Based on these parameters and technical feasibility by current sensor and actuator technology, representative test scenarios and pass/fail-criteria are defined. The outcome of the study is an overview of the accident situation between right turning trucks and straight driving cyclists in Germany as well as a corresponding test procedure for driver assistance systems that at this first stage will be informing or warning the driver. This test procedure is meant to be the basis for an international discussion on introducing turning assist systems in vehicle regulations.
In the paper it is investigated to what extend one can extrapolate the detailed accident database GIDAS (German In-Depth Accident Study), with survey area Hanover and Dresden region, to accident behavior in other regions and countries within Europe and how such an extrapolation can be implemented and evaluated. Moreover, it is explored what extent of accident data for the target country is necessary for such an extrapolation and what can be done in situations with sparse and low accident information in a target region. It will be shown that a direct transfer of GIDAS injury outcomes to other regions does not lead to satisfactory results. But based on GIDAS and using statistical decision tree methods, an extrapolation methodology will be presented which allows for an adequate prediction of the distribution of injury severity in severe traffic accidents for European countries. The method consists essentially of a separation of accidents into well-described subgroups of accidents within which the accident severity distribution does not vary much over different regions. In contrast the distribution over the various subgroups of accidents typically is rather different between GIDAS and the target. For the separation into the subgroups meaningful accident parameters (like accident type, traffic environment, type of road etc.) have been selected. The developed methodology is applied to GIDAS data for the years 1999-2012 and is evaluated with police accident data for Sweden (2002 to 2012) and the United Kingdom (2004 to 2010). It is obtained that the extrapolation proposal has good to very good predictive power in the category of severe traffic accidents. Moreover, it is shown that iterative proportional fitting enables the developed extrapolation method to lead to a satisfactory extrapolation of accident outcomes even to target regions with sparse accident information. As an important potential application of the developed methodology the a priori extrapolation of effects of (future) safety systems, the operation of which can only be well assessed on the basis of very detailed GIDAS accident data, is presented. Based on the evaluation of the presented extrapolation method it will be shown that GIDAS very well represents severe accidents, i.e. accidents with at least one severely or fatally injured person involved, for other countries in Europe. The developed extrapolation method reaches its limits in cases for which only very little accident information is available for the target region.
Euro NCAP will start to test pedestrian Automatic Emergency Braking Systems (AEB) from 2016 on. Test procedures for these tests had been developed by and discussed between the AsPeCSS project and other initiatives (e.g. the AEB group with Thatcham Research from the UK). This paper gives an overview on the development process from the AsPeCSS side, summarizes the current test and assessment procedures as of March 2015 and shows test and assessment results of five cars that had been tested by BASt for AsPeCSS and the respective manufacturer. The test and assessment methodology seems appropriate to rate the performance of different vehicles. The best test result - still one year ahead of the test implementation - is around 80%, while the worst rating result is around 10%. Other vehicles are between these boundaries.
Autonomous Emergency Braking (AEB) systems for pedestrians have been predicted to offer substantial benefit. On this basis, consumer rating programmes, e.g. Euro NCAP, are developing rating schemes to encourage fitment of these systems. One of the questions that needs to be answered to do this fully, is to determine how the assessment of the speed reduction offered by the AEB is integrated with the current assessment of the passive safety for mitigation of pedestrian injury. Ideally, this should be done on a benefit related basis. The objective of this research was to develop a benefit based methodology for assessment of integrated pedestrian protection systems with pre-crash braking and passive safety components. A methodology has been developed which calculates the cost of pedestrian injury expected, assuming all pedestrians in the target population (i.e. pedestrians impacted by the front of a passenger car) are impacted by the car being assessed, taking into account the impact speed reduction offered by the car’s AEB (if fitted) and the passive safety protection offered by the car’s frontal structure. For rating purposes, this cost can be normalised by comparing it to the cost calculated for selected cars. The methodology uses the speed reductions measured in AEB tests to determine the speed at which each casualty in the target population will be impacted. The injury to each casualty is then calculated using the results from standard Euro NCAP pedestrian impactor tests and injury risk curves. This injury is converted into cost using ‘Harm’ type costs for the body regions tested. These costs are weighted and summed. Weighting factors were determined using accident data from Germany and GB and the results of a benefit analysis performed by the EU FP7 AsPeCSS project. This resulted in German and GB versions of the methodology. The methodology was used to assess cars with good, average and poor Euro NCAP pedestrian ratings, with and without a current AEB system fitted. It was found that the decrease in casualty injury cost achieved by fitting an AEB system was approximately equivalent to that achieved by increasing the passive safety rating from poor to average. Also, it was found that the assessment was influenced strongly by the level of head protection offered in the scuttle and windscreen area because this is where head impact occurs for a large proportion of casualties. The major limitation within the methodology is the assumption used implicitly during weighting. This is that the cost of casualty injuries to body areas, such as the thorax, not assessed by the headform and legform impactors, and other casualty injuries such as those caused by ground impact, are related linearly to the cost of casualty injuries assessed by the impactors. A methodology for assessment of integrated pedestrian protection systems was developed. This methodology is of interest to consumer rating programmes which wish to include assessment of these systems. It also raises the interesting issue if the head impact test area should be weighted to reflect better real-world benefit.
The EVERSAFE project addressed many safety issues for electric vehicles including the crash and post-crash safety. The project reviewed the market shares of full electric and hybrid vehicles, latest road traffic accident data involving severely damaged electric vehicles in Europe, and identified critical scenarios that may be particular for electric vehicles. Also, recent results from international research on the safety of electric vehicles were included in this paper such as results from performed experimental abuse cell and vehicle crash tests (incl. non-standardized tests with the Mitsubishi i-MiEV and the BMW i3), from discussions in the UN IG REESS and the GTR EVS as well as guidelines (handling procedures) for fire brigades from Germany, Sweden and the United States of America. Potential hazards that might arise from damaged electric vehicles after severe traffic accidents are an emerging issue for modern vehicles and were summarized from the perspective of different national approaches and discussed from the practical view of fire fighters. Recent rescue guidelines were reviewed and used as the basis for a newly developed rescue procedure. The paper gives recommendations in particular towards fire fighters, but also to vehicle manufacturers and first-aiders.
Since the beginning of the testing activities related to passive pedestrian safety, the width of the test area being assessed regarding its protection level for the lower extremities of vulnerable road users has been determined by geometrical measurements at the outer contour of the vehicle. During the past years, the trend of a decreased width of the lower extremity test and assessment area realized by special features of the outer vehicle frontend design could be observed. This study discusses different possibilities for counteracting this development and thus finding a robust definition for this area including all structures with high injury risk for the lower extremities of vulnerable road users in the event of a collision with a motor vehicle. While Euro NCAP is addressing the described problem by defining a test area under consideration of the stiff structures underneath the bumper fascia, a detailed study was carried out on behalf of the European Commission, aiming at a robust, worldwide harmonized definition of the bumper test area for legislation, taking into account the specific requirements of different certification procedures of the contracting parties of the UN/ECE agreements from 1958 and 1998. This paper details the work undertaken by BASt, also serving as a contribution to the TF-BTA of the UN/ECE GRSP, towards a harmonized test area in order to better protect the lower extremities of vulnerable road users. The German In-Depth Accident Database GIDAS is studied with respect to the potential benefit of a revised test area. Several practical options are discussed and applied to actual vehicles, investigating the differences and possible effects. Tests are carried out and the results studied in detail. Finally, a proposal for a feasible definition is given and a suggestion is made for solving possible open issues at angled surfaces due to rotation of the impactor. The study shows that, in principle, there is a need for the entire vehicle width being assessed with regard to the protection potential for lower extremities of vulnerable road users. It gives evidence on the necessity for a robust definition of the lower extremity test area including stiff and thus injurious structures at the vehicle frontend, especially underneath the bumper fascia. The legal definition of the lower extremity test area will shortly be almost harmonized with the robust Euro NCAP requirements, as already endorsed by GRSP, taking into account injurious structures and thus contributing to the enhanced protection of vulnerable road users. After finalization of the development of a torso mass for the flexible pedestrian legform impactor (FlexPLI) it is recommended to consider again the additional benefit of assessing the entire vehicle width.
During the past five years, a Euro NCAP technical working group on pedestrian safety has been working on improving test and assessment procedures for enhanced passive pedestrian safety. After harmonizing the tools and procedures as much as possible with legislation, the work was mainly focused on the development of grid procedures for the pedestrian body regions head, upper leg with pelvis and lower leg with knee. Furthermore, the test parameters for the head and the upper leg were revised, a new lower legform impactor was introduced and the injury thresholds were adjusted or, where necessary, the injury criteria were changed. Finally, the assessment limits and colour scheme were refined, widening the range and adding two more colours in order to provide a more detailed description of the pedestrian safety performance. By abstaining from an assessment based on a worst point selection philosophy, the improved test point determination procedures that were introduced during the years 2013 and 2014 give a more homogeneous, high resolution picture of the pedestrian safety performance of the vehicle frontends. By using a uniform grid for each test zone approximately 200 test points, evenly distributed within each area, can now be assessed per vehicle. The introduction of the flexible pedestrian legform impactor in 2014 enables a more realistic injury prediction of the knee and the tibia using a biofidelic test tool. With the new upper legform test that has been launched in 2015 the assessment in that area is now focusing on the injured body region instead of the injury causing vehicle part and thus is aligned with the approach in the remaining body regions head and lower leg. At the same time, a monitoring test with the headform impactor against the bonnet leading edge is closing the possible gap between the test areas to identify injury causing vehicle parts that moved out of focus due to the introduction of the new upper legform test. The paper describes the new test and assessment procedures with their underlying philosophy and gives an outlook in terms of open issues, specifying the needs for further improvement in the future. In parallel to the work of the pedestrian subgroup, a Euro NCAP working group on heavy vehicles introduced a set of protocol changes in 2011 that were related to the assessment of M1 vehicles derived from commercial vehicles, with a gross vehicle weight between 2.5 and 3.5 tons and 8 or 9 seats. The paper also investigates the applicability of the new pedestrian test and assessment procedures to heavy vehicles.
Upcoming test procedures and regulations consider the use of Q-dummies. Especially Q6 and Q10 will be introduced to assess the safety of child occupants in vehicle rear seats. Therefore detailed knowledge of these dummies is important to improve safety. As recent studies have shown, chest deflection measurements of both dummies are influenced by parameters like belt geometry. This could lead to a non optimized design of child restraint systems (CRS) and belt systems. The objective of this study is to obtain a more detailed understanding of the sensitivity of chest measurements to restraint parameters and to investigate the possibilities of chest acceleration as an alternative for the assessment of chest injury risks. A study of frontal impact sled tests was performed with Q6 and Q10 in a generic rear seat environment on a bench. Belt parameters like modified belt attachment locations were varied. For the Q6 dummy, different positioning settings of the CRS (booster with backrest) and of the dummy itself were investigated. The Q10 dummy was seated on a booster cushion. Here the position of the upper belt anchorage point was varied. To simulate the influence of vehicle rotation in the ODB crash configuration, the bench was pre-rotated on the sled in additional tests with the Q10. This configuration was tested with and without pretensioner and load limiter. Chest deflection in Q6 showed a high sensitivity to changes in positioning of the CRS and the dummy itself. A more slouched position of the CRS or dummy resulted in a reduction of measured chest deflection, whereas chest acceleration increased for a more slouched position of the CRS. Chest deflection in Q10 is sensitive to belt geometry as already shown in other studies. In a more outboard position of the shoulder belt anchorage the measured chest deflection is higher. Chest acceleration shows the opposite tendency, which is highest for the rearmost location of the upper belt anchorage. On a pre-rotated bench the highest chest deflection within this test series was observed without load limiter/pretensioner and an outboard belt position. By optimizing the belt location and the use of pretensioner/load limier the chest deflection was significantly reduced. For the Q6 a criterion based on chest acceleration as well as deflection measured at two locations might be the most reliable approach, which requires further research with an additional upper deflection sensor. In the Q10 the measured chest deflection does not always correctly reflect the severity of chest loading. The deflection is depending on initial belt position and restraint parameters as well as test conditions, which result in different directions of belt migration. A3ms chest acceleration might be a better indicator for severity of chest loading independent of different conditions like belt geometries. However, in some cases the benefit of an optimized restraint system could only be shown by deflection. These findings suggest that further research is needed to identify a chest injury assessment method, which could be based on deflection as well as acceleration or other parameters related to belt to occupant interaction.
Frontal impact is still the most relevant impact direction in terms of injury causation amongst car occupants. Especially for car-to-car frontal impacts the mass ratio between the involved vehicles has a significant impact on the injury risk (the heavier the opponent car the higher the injury risk). In order to address this issue frontal Mobile Deformable Barrier test procedures have been developed world-wide (for example the MPDB procedure that was fully described during the FIMCAR Project). The objective of this study was to investigate how vehicles of different weight classes perform in a mobile barrier test procedure compared to a fixed barrier test procedure (the full width rigid and offset deformable barrier test). Beyond that, the influence of vehicle mass and vehicle deformation on injuries was evaluated based on real world accident data. Five vehicle types were selected and tested in a fixed offset test procedure (ODB), a full width rigid barrier test procedure (FWRB) and a mobile offset test procedure (MPDB). For the accident analyses data from the German In-Depth Accident Study (GIDAS) was evaluated with a focus on MAIS 2+ injured belted front row car (UN-R 94 compliant cars) occupants in frontal impact accidents. Test data indicates higher dummy loadings, in particular for the head acceleration and chest acceleration, in the MPDB test for the vehicles with a mass lighter than the trolley (1,500 kg) compared to the FWRB test. The trend of increased vehicle stiffness (especially illustrated by tests with the MPDB and small cars) shows the need of a further improvement of passive restraint systems to reduce the occupant loading and with it the injury risk. The analyzed GIDAS data confirm the higher injury risk for occupants in cars with an accident weight of less than 1,500 kg compared to those with a crash weight above 1,500 kg in car-to-car and car-to-object or car-to-HGV, respectively. Furthermore the injury risk increases with decreasing mass ratio (i.e., the opponent car is heavier) in car-to-car accidents. Independent from the higher injury risk, the risk for passenger compartment intrusion in frontal impact appears not to be independent on the crash weight of the car.
During a lifecycle a tyre undergoes degradations due to mechanical wear and chemical ageing which affect not only durability and safety but also tyre/road noise emission and rolling resistance. This paper presents a study with the purpose to study how much tyre/road noise and rolling resistance change when car tyres are worn down from the original 8 mm tread depth to 2 mm, and when chemical ageing of the tyre rubber is simulated by exposure to heat. Six car tyres of different types were selected for the study which were worn on a wear machine in steps of 2 mm tread depth. Before, between and after these wear sessions tyre/road noise and rolling resistance were measured on two drum facilities with different surface textures, including replicas of ISO surfaces. Additionally, coast-by and CPX measurements were made on outdoor ISO test tracks. The results show that the wear and age effect was low on ISO surfaces but dramatic (noise increased with wear) on the rough-textured surface and high but opposite on an extremely smooth surface.
The German highway network is facing new challenges in the near future. The structures have to deal with increasing traffic loads, climate change effects and new requirements regarding sustainability while they are getting older and budget cuts can be expected. To guarantee a reliable highway network, it will be vital to adapt and enhance innovative approaches. Current bridge management relies on the results of conventional bridge inspections and thus has certain limitations when it comes to insufficient load bearing capacity and other systematic weaknesses. Therefore, new approaches for real time condition assessment of critical road infrastructure elements are to be developed.
Knowledge of material properties is of great importance when developing new types of concrete and construction methods for road building, and for quality control and quality assurance. Physical material characteristics are likewise the basis for dimensioning and assessing the residual substance of concrete pavements. One relevant characteristic when examining thermally induced stress and deformation is the coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) of concrete. This indicator, for example, significantly influences the longitudinal expansion of the pavement system as well as the degree of curling of slabs and joint movements. Extensive tests were conducted during the technical engineering assessment of the structural substance of concrete pavements in the German motorway network, including tests to determine the CTE of existing types of concrete. Because no standardised procedure currently exists in Germany for using tests to determine the CTE of concrete, the initial task was to develop a suitable test procedure from a road-building perspective, taking consideration of the national prevailing structural conditions. This article presents the results of selected status analyses, in which the CTE was determined for a total of 656 individual samples. The values calculated for the top and bottom drilled core layer are in the range 8.9 – 13.2 x 10-6/K, whereby the average CTE assumes a value of 10.7 x 10-6/K. The deviations of the CTEs from the bottom and top drilled core layer are in principle significantly below the limitation to a maximum of 2.50 x 10-6/K recommended in literature.
Mobility is a central requirement for economic growth, employment and participation of each individual in social life. This basic principle of the BMVI (Federal Ministry of Transport and Digital Infrastructure) requires an intact and functional infrastructure. In a context of increasing investments over the next few years, it will be relevant to develop a network related systematic procedure to be part of the structural maintenance of the federal highway network. In the planning of maintenance measures, the knowledge about the state of structural performance and its long-term development is of central importance. In the following, a method is presented which allows the mechanically and statistically reliable assessment and prognosis of structural performance of concrete pavements. In addition, the application and procedure are applied to a case study.
In Germany, expenditure for the construction of new and maintenance of existing federal highways is currently at a record level of EUR 8 billion per year. In connection with the planned infrastructure policy reforms it is necessary to further develop the planning tools for dimensioning and substance assessment of road structures in order to increase the efficiency of construction measures. The stress caused by traffic is of central importance here. Since unevenness in the road surface has a significant influence on the dynamic part of the wheel load, dynamic effects must be explicitly taken into account. As a result, increasing unevenness can lead to higher dynamic loads and, in the context of a corresponding number of wheel rollovers, to disproportionate damage to the road structure. In general, a shock factor is taken into account during dimensioning, which is to be considered as a function of vehicle suspension, load, speed and evenness. This approach is not sufficient for concrete road structures executed as slabs. In the normal case, only the periodically occurring individual event of a transverse contraction joint, superimposed by irreversible and/or temporary slab deformations, can lead to a significant increase in the dynamic wheel load. In addition, the existing slab deformations are tied to many boundary conditions and can therefore vary greatly in their characteristics. For the further development of methods for dimensioning and residual substance assessment with regard to their accuracy, a three-dimensional slab-specific view of the road surface is therefore appropriate. In this paper, a suitable measuring method for three-dimensional surface laser scanning and an algorithm for the classification of slab deformations are presented.
Topics of the status report are: Road accidents in Germany ; Socio-economic costs due to road traffic accidents in Germany , German Road Safety Programme. Finished projects: Turning Assist Systems for Trucks ; Handbook „Accessibility in long-distance bus transport“ ; EU project PROSPECT ; Intersection assistance (Euro NCAP) ; Personal Light Electric Vehicles (PLEV) ; Automatic Emergency Braking for Heavy Goods Vehicles ; KO-HAF ; AFAS ; SENIORS ; Adoption of UN-GTR9-PH2. Ongoing and planned research: Safety potential and testing of reversing assistants for passengers cars (M1) and LGV´s (N1) ; Study on winter tires ; Automatic Emergency Braking for passenger cars ; Motorcyclist-friendly safety barriers ; Active motorcycle safety ; EU-Project PIONEERS ; Friction prediction ; Bus safety: smoke gas toxicity ; HMI aspects on Camera-Monitor-Systems ; Activities with regard to UN R 22 and helmets for S-Pedelecs ; Seriously injured road accident casualties ; UNECE IWG on Deployable Pedestrian Protection Systems (Active bonnets) ; GIDAS – new requirements to address new vehicle technology ; Human Body Modelling ; Child Safety at the UNECE with regard to R 129 ; Development of requirements on automated driving functions for vehicle regulations ; EU-Project L3-Pilot ; Development of evaluation methods for driver interaction with assistance and automation (national research and Euro NCAP) ; EU-Project OSCCAR ; PEGASUS ; Development of basic scenarios for the description of control-relevant requirements for continuous automated vehicle guidance ; EU project HEADSTART ; C-Roads Germany ; Practical Test for the Quality of Congestion-Tail Information ; Research program road safety.
The Intersection 2020 project was initiated to develop a test procedure for Automatic Emergency Braking systems in intersection car-to-car scenarios to be transferred to Euro NCAP. The project aims to address current road traffic accidents on European roads and therefore sets a priority of the identification of the most important car-to-car accidents and Use Cases. Taking into account technological and practical limitations, Test Scenarios are derived from the Use Cases in a later stage of the project. This paper presents parts of a larger study and provides an overview of common car-to-vehicle(at least four wheels) collision types at junctions in Europe and specifies seven Accident Scenarios from which the three scenarios “Straight Crossing Paths (SCP)”, “Left Turn Across Path – Opposite Direction Conflict (LTAP/OD)” and “Left Turn Across Path – Lateral Direction (LTAP/LD)” are most important due to their high relevance regarding severe car-to-car accidents. Technical details about crash parameters such as collision and initial speeds are delivered. The analysis work performed is input for the definition and selection of the Use Cases as well as for the project’s benefit estimation. The numbers of accidents and fatalities in accidents at intersections involving a passenger car were shown per intersection type. In both statistics, it was found that accidents at crossroads and T- or staggered junctions are of highest relevance, followed by roundabouts. Focusing on accidents at intersections between one passenger car and another road user shows that around one-third of all accidents and related fatalities could have been assigned to car-to-PTW accidents and one-fifth of all accidents and fatalities to car-to-car accidents. Regarding car-to-car accidents with at least serious injury outcome 38% out of 34,489 car-to-car accidents happened at intersections. These figures correspond to 18% of the fatalities (4,236 fatalities in total). Considering all intersection types, around half of all related accidents happened in urban environments whereas this number decreased to one-third of all fatalities. Further, the proportion of road fatalities per country occurring at intersections varies widely across the EU. Also, there are proportionately more fatalities in daylight or twilight conditions at junctions. Use Cases are supposed to be derived from Accident Scenarios and by adding detailed information for example about the road layout, right-of-way and the vehicle trajectories prior to the collision. Instead of applying cluster algorithms to the accident data, a pragmatic approach was finally preferred to create them. Note: Use Cases serve as an intermediate step between the Accident Scenarios and the Test Scenarios which describe the actual testing conditions. Finally, 74 Use Cases were identified. This large number indicates the complexity of intersection crashes due to the combination of several parameters.
This study aimed to better understand nitrate transport in the soil system in a part of the state of North Rhine-Westphalia, in Germany, and to aid in the development of groundwater protection plans. An advection-diffusion (AD) cell was used in a miscible displacement experiment setup to characterize nitrate transport in 12 different soil samples from the study area. The three nitrate sorption isotherms were tested to define the exact nitrate interaction with the soil matrix. Soils varied in their properties which in its turn explain the variations in nitrate transport rates. Soil texture and organic matter content showed to have the most important effect on nitrate recovery and retardation. The miscible displacement experiment indicated a decrease in retardation by increasing sand fraction, and an increase in retardation by increasing soil organic matter content. Soil samples with high sand fractions (up to 94 %) exhibited low nitrate sorption capacity of less than 10 %, while soils with high organic matter content showed higher sorption of about 30 %. Based on parameterization for nitrate transport equation, the pore water velocity for both sandy and loamy soils were significantly different (P < 0.001). Pore water velocity in sandy soil (about 4 x 10 high 3 m/s) was about 100 to 1000 larger than in loamy soils (8.7 x 10 high 5 m/s). On the other hand, the reduction in nitrate transport in soils associated with high organic matter was due to fine pore pathways clogged by fine organic colloids. It is expected that the existing micro-phobicity increased the nitrate recovery from 9 to 32 % resulting in maximum diffusion rates of about 3.5 x 10 high 5 m/s2 in sandy soils (sample number CS-04) and about 1.4 x 10 high 7 m/s2 in silt loam soils (sample number FS-02).
Intelligent transportation systems have a high potential to optimise traffic flow, to increase road traffic safety and to reduce environmental pollution. Real Time Traffic Information (RTTI) systems help to achieve these targets. Beside verbal radio announcements the most used RTTI service is the Traffic Message Channel (TMC) as a part of the Radio Data System (RDS). TMC messages support drivers in their choice of efficient routes or prepare them to cope with situations on the route ahead. The main focus of the paper is on the quality of TMC messages in Germany. After a brief overview of RTTI stakeholders in Germany and their role in the German public traffic information chain the following literature analysis summarizes the state-of-the-art on traffic information quality. Then the paper gives an overview about methodology and first results of an ongoing project on traffic information quality that has been initiated by the Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen (BASt, German Federal Highway Research Institute) in 2008. The paper describes a concept how to check all processing iterations of the traffic information chain and occurring failures. A cause-effect-analysis forms the basis of this concept to get an idea which reasons (= process) lead to which measurable effect (= quality indicator). The paper demonstrates the principle with the pre-process of the Location Code List (LCL), which is the major basis for message coding since the LCL describes all locations that can be named in a TMC message.
In most of the existing highway capacity manuals, level of service (LOS) of freeway weaving segments and ramp junctions is traditionally defined by the speed, volume or density in critical areas of merge, diverge and weaving manoeuvres. In that traditional concept several capacity values of different critical areas (merge, diverge, weaving) as well as upstream and downstream basic freeway segments within the influence areas are evaluated separately. In this paper, a new model which considers the total segment of freeway merge, diverge, and weaving as an entire object is introduced. A combined volume-to-capacity ratio is used for defining the LOS of the total segment. According to the probability and queuing theory, the volume-to-capacity ratio of the whole segment can be considered as a combination of volume-to-capacity ratios in the different critical areas under consideration. The parameters of the new model can be calibrated with field data. Those parameters are functions of the number of lanes on the freeways, the number of lanes in the on-ramps or off-ramps, the length of the acceleration, deceleration, or weaving sections. Varying the model parameters the function can be fitted to the existing capacity models for different types of weaving segments or ramp junctions. With this model, the traffic quality (LOS) can be obtained directly as a function of the volumes on the freeway and on the on-ramp or off-ramp respectively. The new model has the following advantages: a) a uniform function for all types of freeway weaving segments and ramp junctions, b) traffic quality assessment for all critical areas under investigation in one step, and c) easy calibration. The new model will be incorporated into the new edition of the German Highway Capacity Manual (HBS 201X).
Test and assessment procedures for passive pedestrian protection of passenger cars are in place for many years within world-wide regulations as well as consumer test programmes. Nevertheless, recent accident investigations show a stagnation of pedestrian fatality numbers on European roads alongside increasing injury severities for older road users. The EU-funded SENIORS (Safety ENhancing Innovations for Older Road userS) project developed and evaluated a thorax injury prediction tool (TIPT) for later incorporation within test and assessment procedures. Accident data indicates an increasing portion of AIS2 and AIS3+ thoracic injuries of older pedestrians and cyclists which are currently not assessed in any test procedure for vulnerable road users. Therefore, SENIORS focused on the development of a test tool predicting the risk of rib fractures of vulnerable road users (VRU). While injury risk functions were reanalyzed, human body model (HBM) simulations against categorized generic vehicle frontends served as input for the definition of test setups and corresponding impact parameters. TIPT component tests against a generic frontend and an actual vehicle were used for the evaluation of the technical feasibility. The TIPT component tests shows the general feasibility of a test procedure for the assessment of thoracic injuries, with good repeatability and reproducibility of kinematics and results. Impact parameters such as the inclination angles of the thorax, angles of the velocity vector and impact speeds well replicate the parameters gained from the HBM simulations. The proposed markup and assessment scheme offers the possibility of a homogeneous evaluation of the protection potential of vehicle frontends while maintaining justifiable testing efforts. During evaluation testing, the proposed requirements were entirely met. The developed prototype of TIPT and launching system offer impact angles and speeds as suggested by HBM simulations. However, since thorax impacts during pedestrian accidents do not occur perpendicularly to the vehicle surface in most cases, the TIPT built-in linear potentiometers do not acquire the true resultant intrusions on the ribcage and thus, TIPT rib deflections do not reflect the actual human injury risk. However; for the impact forward to the bonnet leading edge, the TIPT seems applicable without further modifications. The test and assessment procedures using the TIPT offer for the first time the possibility of replicating the kinematics of a pedestrian thorax with a component test. The developed assessment scheme gives a first indication on how the risk for thoracic injuries could be implemented within the Euro NCAP Box 3 assessment. Future development of the TIPT may focus on implementing a rib cage that can deflect in all axes in a humanlike way.
Per definition, SAE Level 2 (L2) Systems perform both the lateral and longitudinal vehicle motion control with the expectation that the driver completes the Object and Event Detection and Response (OEDR). Since every system performs also parts of the OEDR itself and this amount of OEDR also varies between different L2 systems depending on the intended system design, it cannot be taken for granted that drivers automatically understand their roles and responsibilities in interaction with the system. Especially highly reliable L2 systems performing a greater amount of OEDR while at the same time requiring only little driver input over time can make it difficult for drivers to correctly identify their role and responsibility. Until now, neither application-oriented assessment methods nor design guidelines for OEDR related system design features taking safety of human-machine-interaction into account are available. The objective is therefore to deliver a standardized tool for the assessment of human-machine-interaction-related safety of vehicles with L2 systems currently available on the market. To evaluate the impact of different system design aspects on safety of human-machine-interaction and also to be able to differentiate between system designs, a holistic, standardized and application-oriented assessment procedure is proposed. The novel tablet-based assessment tool focuses not only on available standards and guidelines but measures also concrete user behaviour and user understanding in interaction with the L2 systems. The aim is to gain further insights which cannot be measured directly by simple checklist instruments. For preparation, based on international standards, literature reviews and expert consultations, a first checklistbased expert-evaluation for currently available vehicles with L2 systems was developed. These assessments are focusing on different sources of user information (e.g. user manual), human-machine-interface design as well as the prevention of unintended use by different driver monitoring techniques. The checklist-tool was developed in cooperation with experts of different EuroNCAP test laboratories and validated in a common expert workshop to gain high level of standardization and agreement. However, to assess safety of human-machine-interaction holistically beyond these rather explicit forms of information design criteria, also implicit forms of drivervehicle-communication via vehicle dynamics, functional behavior or reliability play an important role and should be taken into account. Therefore, the main and novel methodological aim is to consider also interaction related processes regarding user´s understanding of roles and responsibilities when applying automated driving functions as well as user´s awareness of automation modes or traffic situations in the modular tablet-based assessment tool.
Airbags are, together with the three-point belt, the most effective passive safety equipment of vehicles. However, literature shows that sound pressure levels of up to 170 dB can occur during airbag deployment. A literature review revealed no systematic experimental data on possible hearing loss by airbag deployment, that also takes any other crash accompanied noise into account, such as deformation and impact noise. Also the rising number of airbags per vehicle resulting in a higher number of deployed airbags in an accident was not addressed with respect to hearing loss. Thus, an extensive test matrix of noise measurements during airbag deployments was conducted including onboard measuring during crashes and static measurements. Dynamic and static experiments with single and multiple airbag deployments were conducted. The results of this study show, that in the analyzed crash constellations the acoustic emission of the collision as well as the car deformation can trigger the stapedius reflex before the airbag deployment. The stapedius reflex protects the inner ear at least partially in case of dangerous sound levels. However, it seems that multiple airbag deployments in a short sequence pose a considerable risk for hearing impairments despite the fully contracted stapedius muscle. Further and in line with Price et al. (2013) it was found that the risk of hearing loss is lower with closed windows. The analysis of patient and accident data showed no link between airbag deployment and hearing loss. This might be caused by low case numbers of reported hearing loss problems up to now. In conclusion the results show that a singular analysis of the sound pressure of airbag deployments without crash accompanied noises is not sufficient as the protective effect of the stapedius reflex is neglected. Still, successive airbag deployments in a short timeframe raise the risk of hearing loss. Further investigation on hearing impairment due to airbag deployment and triggering of the stapedius reflex is needed and the data acquisition of accidents and patients should consider hearing loss aspects.
Bicyclists and pedestrians belong to the most endangered groups in urban traffic. The EU-funded collaborative research project PROSPECT (‘PROactive Safety for PEdestrians and CyclisTs´) aims to significantly improve safety of those unprotected traffic participants by expanding the scope of scenarios covered by future active safety systems in passenger cars. Concepts for sensor control systems are built into three prototypes covering emergency interventions such as Autonomous Emergency Braking (AEB) as well as Autonomous Emergency Steering (AES). These systems tackle the well-known challenges of currently available systems including limited field-of-view by sensors, fuzzy path prediction, unreliable intent reaction times and slow reaction times. These highly innovative functions call for extensive validation methodologies based on already established consumer testing procedures. Since these functions are developed towards the prevention of intersection accidents in urban areas, a key aspect of the advanced testing methodology is the valid approximation of naturalistic trajectories using driving robots. Eventually, several simulator studies complemented a user acceptance and benefit analysis to evaluate the expected overall impact of the PROSPECT systems. The results achieved within the PROSPECT project are highly relevant for upcoming test protocols regarding the most critical situations with Vulnerable Road Users (VRU). With introducing the new methods in Euro NCAP (European New Car Assessment Programme) a significant increase in road safety is expected.
To assess occupant safety in a crash test, criteria associating the measurements made with a crash test dummy to injury risk are necessary. To enable better protection of elderly car occupants the objective of this study was to develop improved thoracic injury criteria for the THOR average male dummy. The development of these criteria is usually based on matched dummy and Post Mortem Human Surrogate (PMHS) tests by relating the obtained PMHS injuries to dummy measurements. This approach is limited, since only a few tests in relevant loading conditions are available and any new test series requires high efforts to be performed due to their complexity and costs. To overcome these limitations and to extend the dataset for the development of THOR dummy chest injury risk functions a simulation-based approach was applied within the EC funded project SENIORS (Safety Enhanced Innovations For older Road Users - www.seniors-project.eu). Within this study frontal impact sled simulations with an FE model representing a THOR average male dummy and matched simulations with a human body model (HBM) representing an elderly car occupant were carried out. The HBM used for this study was the THUMS TUC with modified rib cage, which was developed in SENIORS. The modifications included material and geometry changes aiming to represent an elderly car occupant. The rib fracture risk was predicted with a deterministic approach whereby a rib was considered broken when the strain exceeded an age-dependent threshold. Furthermore, a probabilistic method was applied to predict the probability of sustaining a certain number of fractured ribs by comparing local strain values to the distribution of cortical rib ultimate strain. By relating the output from the HBM simulations to a multi-point dummy injury criterion, injury risk curves were calculated by statistical methods. The wide range of loading conditions resulted in the desired range of injuries and THOR ATD output. The number of fractured ribs predicted by the HBM based on the deterministic prediction method was between 0 and 15. Furthermore, the probabilistic risk for the number of rib fractures equal or greater than two, three or four was calculated for each load case. The THOR rib deflection criterion Rmax was between 18 and 56 mm, while the PC Score was in the range of 2.5 to 7.2. Based on these outputs new risk curves for the predicted deterministic (AIS2+/3+) and probabilistic injury risk were calculated. The new curves show reasonable shapes and significance that provide trust in their application. The new risk curves are compared to risk curves obtained by traditional methods. The results were found similar to previous injury risk functions based on physical tests, which gives a high level of confidence in the chosen approach. The simulation-based approach of matched ATD model vs. HBM simulation was successfully applied. Rmax curves show a slightly better quality than the injury criterion PC Score.
At the end of each year, the German Federal Highway Research Institute (BASt) publishes the road safety balance of the closing year. They describe the development of accident and casualty numbers disaggregated by road user types, age groups, type of road and the consequences of the accidents. However, at the time of publishing, these series are only available for the first eight or nine months of the year. To make the balance for the whole year, the last three or four months are forecasted. The objective of this study was to improve the accuracy of these forecasts through structural time-series models that include effects of meteorological conditions. The results show that, compared to the earlier heuristic approach, root mean squared errors are reduced by up to 55% and only two out of the 27 different data series yield a modest rise of prediction errors. With the exception of four data series, prediction accuracies also clearly improve incorporating meteorological data in the analysis. We conclude that our approach provides a valid alternative to provide input to policy makers in Germany.
Effects of time pressure on left-turn decisions of elderly drivers in a fixed-base driving simulator
(2019)
In countries with right lane traffic left-turn maneuvers at intersections are known to be particularly critical for elderly drivers. It has been suggested that the implementation and use of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) might offer a solution to compensate for age-related weaknesses in driving-related skills. In the present paper an experiment is reported which explored the effects of time pressure on the performance of left-turn manoeuvers supported by an ADAS function (time gap assistant). The study was performed in a fixed-base driving simulator with 20 younger (22-37) and 21 elderly drivers (60-84) who were observed when negotiating left-turn manoeuvers on rural roads with and without the assistance function active. Subjects performed the task once under conditions of time pressure once without. Results indicate that both age groups used the assistance function to perform the left-turn manoeuvers with shorter time gaps. Under conditions of time pressure this effect was more pronounced, and the effects of time pressure were stronger for the elderly. However, there were only weak indications for a specific benefit of the assistance function for the elderly.
Traditionally, traffic count statistics in Germany contain the so-called relevant hourly volume, which is defined as the 30th-highest hour of the year when listing the hourly volumes in descending order. When the first edition of the German Highway Capacity Manual (HBS) was prepared in 2001, the Federal Government decided that this 30th hour should be used as the basis for the level of service determination for all Federal freeways and trunk roads. While German freeways are quite well equipped with inductive loop detectors, there are much fewer counts on rural roads and almost no long-term data on urban roads. With the current redraft of the German HBS detailed advice will be given on how to estimate peak-hour demand (all vehicles and heavy vehicle portion), based on the n-th highest hour concept depending on the available traffic counts. As the HBS will be divided into three major parts: freeways, rural roads, and urban roads, three separate chapters for the peak-hour demand estimation will be provided. Whereas for freeways the task consists in finding the comparable site equipped with inductive loop detectors, for urban roads it is a matter of establishing which time periods of the year and weekdays are appropriate for manual short-term counts as estimation of the 30th hour of the year. For all kind of traffic devices the requirements on traffic demand models for level of service calculations are described.
Although cruise control (CC) is available for most cars, no studies have been found which examine how this automation system influences driving behaviour. However, a relatively large number of studies have examined adaptive cruise control (ACC) which compared to CC includes also a distance control. Besides positive effects with regard to a better compliance to speed limits, there are also indications of smaller distances to lead vehicles and slower responses in situations that require immediate braking. Similar effects can be expected for CC as this system takes over longitudinal control as well. To test this hypothesis, a simulator study was conducted at the German Aerospace Center. Twenty-two participants drove different routes (highway and motorway) under three different conditions (assisted by ACC, CC and manual driving without any system). Different driving scenarios were examined including a secondary task condition. On the one hand, both systems lead to lower maximum velocities and less speed limit violations. There was no indication that drivers shift more of their attention towards secondary tasks when driving with CC or ACC. However, there were delayed driver reactions in critical situations, e.g., in a narrow curve or a fog bank. These results give rise to some caution regarding the safety effects of these systems, especially if in the future their range of functionality (e.g., ACC Stop-and-Go) is further increased.
The term test procedure refers to a method that describes how a system has to be tested to identify and assess specific behavior or properties by experiments. This also includes the specification of required tools, equipment, boundary conditions, and evaluation methods. Test procedures are an essential tool to check whether desired product properties are present, which of course also applies to the development of driver assistance systems. In addition to development and release testing that mainly is performed by the vehicle or system manufacturer, there are tests with the purpose of an independent product testing that are conducted by external test organizations. These tests are needed for vehicle type approval (for admission to a specific market), in the context of applying the standard for functional safety (in both cases mainly executed by technical services (being accredited as certification laboratory)) or for customer information purposes (by a test institute for consumer protection). The focus of this chapter is these "external" test methods. After a taxonomy of test procedures, the differences between legislation (type approval) and consumer testing are highlighted. Typical tests and the associated test setup, tools, and assessment criteria are discussed, and an outlook toward testing in the near and mid-future is given.
The "Autonomous driving on the roads of the future: Villa Ladenburg Project" by the Daimler und Benz-Stiftung looks at degrees of automation that will only become technically feasible in the distant future. The treatment of the legal questions in the present chapter therefore draws heavily on the description of the use cases, which begin to provide a concrete basis for evaluating individual issues. Uncertainties in predicting future technical developments can be expected and will have a commensurate impact on the assumptions and conclusions of this chapter. The resulting uncertainty is nevertheless unavoidable if one wants to press ahead with important interrelated issues. This chapter is therefore intended as a contribution to the debate on societal aspects of automated driving from a legal perspective and not as a legalistic evaluation of the subject. The consideration will largely focus on the situation within the context of current German law. The legal views expressed are those of the author and are based on nine years of experience in the field of driver assistance system research. In terms of the underlying conception presented here, the societal dimension of autonomous vehicles addressed in the present project goes well beyond the adjustments to the legal framework currently being called for in Germany. The following will examine the question of "societal acceptance" in the context of the legal questions raised by autonomous vehicles. This line of investigation is not immediately obvious and covers only a segment of the more thoroughgoing focus of the project.
The term driver assistance systems in the chapter title shall be understood to include vehicle automation. This chapter starts with a homogeneous and consistent classification and nomenclature of all kinds of driver assistance systems known and under discussion today (including vehicle automation). It thereby builds upon familiar classification schemes by the German Federal Highway Research Institute (BASt) and the standardization body SAE international. Detailed evaluation of the German legal situation for driver assistance systems and vehicle automation is provided in the following Sect. 2. In Sect. 3, an overview is given on the legal system in the US to reveal aspects relevant for vehicle automation. This is intended as initial information for those not acquainted to the US legal system which has been the first to regulate automation in several federal states. Finally, in Sect. 4, the current rating scheme of the European New Car Assessment Programme (EuroNCAP) is presented in comparison to legal instruments. The model of a consumer protection based approach proves to be a flexible instrument with great advantages in promoting new technologies. Technical vehicle regulations on the other hand rule minimum requirements. Both approaches are needed to achieve maximum vehicle safety.
The Netherlands is on the way to change its existing skid resistance measuring method for its highway network from the Dutch RAW 72, a longitudinal force method, to the Sideway Force method. This method is described in the Technical Specification 15901-8 (SKM device) as well as 15901-6 (SCRIM device) and is in use in 9 European countries. The CEN TC 227 WG5 on Surface Characteristics is currently working on combining of these two technical Specifications into a European standard for Sideway-Force (SWF) measurement devices. The idea of this change in the Netherlands was perceived in 2013 and since then a lot of meetings have been held with the different Dutch decision makers as well as with countries which currently operate SWF devices. There was an intensive exchange of knowledge about these devices and their corresponding quality assurance systems, because the Netherlands wanted to incorporate and rely on an existing system of a neighbor country without losing their present level of quality. The Netherlands has therefore decided to incorporate the German SKM approach. The network monitoring with the new system will start in 2017. To ensure the quality of skid resistance measurements and further cooperation in this field, it has been decided to initiate an alliance between BASt and the Dutch road owner Rijkswaterstaat (RWS). This alliance will facilitate an exchange of research activities, calibration of the Dutch systems according to the existing German Standard as well as control measurements with a BASt-device on the Dutch network during the network monitoring. During 2016 also comparative measurements will be performed on a network level with the current Dutch device and with an SKM device to determine a conversion between the two and to be able to define new threshold values.
APT with the mobile load simulator MLS10 towards non-destructive pavement structural analysis
(2019)
In 2014 a research program has been started about non-destructive test methods to evaluate the structure of pavements. This task has been given to two research groups - first research group is led by RWTH Aachen University (Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule) and the second by University of Siegen. This paper focuses on the initial findings of the running research program. The assessment of the existing infrastructure and its condition will be one of the main tasks during the next years in order to use the available budget for maintenance accurately and efficiently. Therefore, it is necessary to identify possible damages and examine their effects on the road construction. BASt (Federal Highway Research Institute) is using the Mobile Load Simulator MLS10 for accelerated pavement testing (APT) on different types of pavements. In addition to non-destructive test methods, sensors are applied to measure structural impacts. The overall objective of this research program is to develop a non-destructive test method that allows the calculation of the remaining life time and load cycles of pavements. To simulate realistic wheel loads in a short period of time the MLS10 on German full scale standard pavement constructions has been used. The first pavement test section was loaded with 3 x 10 high 6 50 kN wheel loads while the second, thinner pavement test section was loaded with 3 x 10 high 5 50 kN wheel loads. Both loads are equivalent to the pavement design load. Three different strategies have been used to analyze and monitor structural changes. The innovative measurements have been realized by the two research groups to collect data for their models. The RWTH Aachen collected data with twelve geophones aligned in a row parallel to the wheel path. The geophones measure the entire vertical deflection basin of the pavement surface that exists due to the passing real truck wheels. These measurements were done for different truck speeds and at different transverse distances to the wheel path. The University of Siegen collected data by using acceleration sensors on the surface of the road construction. After recording the data they were integrated into displacement signals and evaluated. Additionally to those measurements BASt used conventional equipment to monitor the pavement structure and surface characteristics. The measurements and evaluation tools used for the innovation program have a high potential to validate APT programs in the future. Based on this research it is possible to start further research activities to push the non-destructive evaluation of pavements structures - not only in APT - into an improved direction.
Annual report 2018
(2019)
With this annual report, BASt is giving the 2018 research year a face. A part of its work is present and in the focus of the public, for example the field test of long trucks, the unique research area duraBASt at the motorway junction Cologne East or the innovative measuring vehicle MESAS for the condition assessment of road surfaces in flowing traffic. A large part of the BASt's work is less effective in attracting public attention but no less important, such as the essential updating of regulations, the testing and approval of products and processes, and the compilation of forecasts and statistics. More than 50 employees report on their research activities and thus give an insight into the tasks of BASt with its core areas of vehicle technology, traffic safety, traffic engineering, road construction as well as bridge and civil engineering. Highlights as well as facts and figures in short and concise form complete the report.
As investigations by BASt have shown, a bond between concrete surfaces and bases may be a disadvantage when water penetrates via joints and from the sides if the bond becomes partially detached at an early stage. Free water may penetrate into the area between the concrete surface and the base and build up in areas where the bond is still intact. The high pressure caused by lorry wheels rolling over the pavement causes hydrodynamic pumping. This creates very high flow speeds with considerable corrosion power. This results in the base course surface being eroded in the areas where heavy vehicles drive over the road and may even lead to water and fine particles from the base courses being expelled through the longitudinal joints between the pavement slab and the lower hard shoulder or first overtaking lane. The erosion of the base leads unavoidably to the bearing conditions deteriorating and increased loading of the concrete surface. Cracks may occur and, later stepping-off and tilting of the plates components. This significantly deteriorates the evenness and consequently the service value of the road. This finally leads to a reduction in the service life of the concrete surface. To avoid such damage water which has penetrated must be able to lose pressure and to then seep away. A possible solution is: A nonwoven fabric substance between concrete suface and bound base course. This construction method has proved himselve on numerous test road sections and were rightly included in the new Codes of Practice for the Standardisation of the Upper Structure of Traffic-Bearing Surfaces (Richtlinien für die Standardisierung des Oberbaues von Verkehrsflächen- RStO).
Federal highway A 26 in Germany : reinforced dams in soft soils - control method according DIN 1054
(2004)
In 2001 the construction of the Federal Highway A 26 in Lower Saxony (north of Germany) was started. In this area the underground is without any substantial bearing capacity as it consists of soft layers ( clay, peat) with a thickness of up to 12 m. Because it was not possible to exchange the soil neither completely nor partially pre-loading procedure (consolidation method) was chosen for this construction. Short- and long-term stability are ensured by the use of high-tensile fabrics for reinforcement at the dam basis. The vertical and horizontal deformations and the stress changes in the soil, caused by the pre-load procedure, has to be controlled by special geotechnical measurements. Additionally, in the higher parts of the dam the strain behaviour of the high-tensile fabrics is measured. These measurements form the basis for the application of the control method according DIN 1054. In this article, the special circumstances of this project are described. Further on the geotechnical measurements, the winning and evaluation of the necessary parameters of the subsoil, and the consequences of these data for the ongoing of the project are laid down. Intermediate results of the geotechnical measurements are described.
Non-point sources of traffic-related pollution become a major concern as they " compared to the point-source inputs " are more difficult to be defined or controlled. It is crucial to evaluate the fraction of traffic-related contamination that is transported to the road surroundings as it could negatively impact soil, surface water and groundwater. This study describes two means through which pollutants leave the road to the surrounding environment. Three German motorways were selected (A4, A555, and A61), where runoff and deposits were analyzed to determine pollutant load moving into the roadside soil or into the drainage system. Each of the three motorways carries approximately 70,000 vehicles a day on 4 to 6 driving lanes; and they cover a broad range of truck participation in the total traffic load ranging from 5.4% to 19.8%. The three motorways represent several topographical and landscape features as forest with noise barrier and parallel as well as perpendicular orientation to the main wind direction. Sampling of runoff and deposition was done on monthly basis. Bulk deposition was collected in Bergerhoff vessels at two heights (1.5 m and 0.3 m above the ground) and in 1 m, 2.5 m, 5 m and 10 m distances from the road edge. The results showed that heavy metals as well as large amounts of mineral compounds are moving from the driving lanes into the roadside environment. This includes sodium from applying deicing salts in winter seasons, which could be found in soil, dust and water samples. Calcium and iron were also detected in almost comparable concentrations. The annual deposition flow (bulk deposition) measured at a height of 1.5 m was higher than the comparative values for urban areas and background measuring points. The spatial distribution of material deposition showed clear differences between the three motorways. The pollutant load in deposition measured near the ground surface was higher than those measured at 1.5 m above the land surface. At all three sites, a clear negative correlation between pollutant load and the distance from the roadside could be found. Nearly 90% of the concentration values of heavy metals in road runoff were below or in the range of the test values for seepage water in the German Soil Protection and Contamination Ordinance. The pH-values around 7 in runoff and adjacent soil provide a good retention capacity in the soil for the heavy metal input.
The road transport infrastructure is facing many challenges and the subsequent adaptation of the infrastructure is of utmost concern. These challenges are as follows: globalization, sustainability, technological and demographic change, an increase in goods transport and climate change. Various climate projections predict changing climatic parameters such as temperature, precipitation and wind speed for Germany. This could have severe impacts on road transport infrastructure as well as road traffic itself. At the Federal Highway Research Institute (Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen), a strategy was developed to adapt roads and engineering structures to the impacts of climate change. The strategy "Anpassung der Straßenverkehrsinfrastruktur an den Klimawandel /Adaptation of road traffic infrastructure to climate change (AdSVIS)" currently comprises about 15 projects. Adaptation measures are to be developed for the identified risk areas and consequently their effectiveness has to be assessed.