Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
Dokumenttyp
- Konferenzveröffentlichung (24)
- Buch (Monographie) (10)
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (3)
- Arbeitspapier (2)
Schlagworte
- Unfall (39) (entfernen)
Institut
- Abteilung Fahrzeugtechnik (39) (entfernen)
The purpose of this paper is to review injuries found in real world lateral collisions and determine the mechanisms responsible for certain kinds of biomechanical failure. During the last years the distribution of deaths among the different types of accidents has changed. Lateral collisions now are the most frequent cause of fatal and other serious injuries. Every third accident is an impact from the side, while every second fatality is the result of a lateral accident. Just a few years ago this value was no higher than 30%. This is probably the result of increasing safety standards for frontal collisions (airbags, seatbelt usage, structural improvements of cars, etc.). Although the number of registered vehicles increased, the total amount of fatalities decreased during the same period. Thus it is now necessary to pay greater attention to the lateral accident situation in order to improve road safety and decrease the number of traffic injuries. Several European organisations had decided to launch the project SID2000, which was funded by the European Commission, with the intention of gathering more knowledge on injuries occurring in lateral accidents and the mechanisms that lead to such injuries. This should enable the group to define the requirements for a new side impact dummy (SID) to be designed. Within the same project the existing TNO-EUROSID 1 was enhanced by another group and the experience gained has now enabled allowed to design a better measuring device for side impacts. The data used for this contribution came from sources from all over Europe and had to be gathered in such a manner that as many accident parameters as possible were taken into account.
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.
The presence and performance of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) has increased over last years. Systems available on the market address also conflicts with vulnerable road users (VRUs) such as pedestrians and cyclists. Within the European project PROSPECT (Horizon2020, funded by the EC) improved VRU ADAS systems are developed and tested. However, before determining systems" properties and starting testing, an up-to-date analysis of VRU crashes was needed in order to derive the most important Use Cases (detailed crash descriptions) the systems should address. Besides the identified Accident Scenarios (basic crash descriptions), this paper describes in short the method of deriving the Use Cases for car-to-cyclist crashes. Method Crashes involving one passenger car and one cyclist were investigated in several European crash databases looking for all injury severity levels (slight, severe and fatal). These data sources included European statistics from CARE, data on national level from Germany, Sweden and Hungary as well as detailed accident information from these three countries using GIDAS, the Volvo Cars Cyclist Accident database and Hungarian in-depth accident data, respectively. The most frequent accident scenarios were studied and Use Cases were derived considering the key aspects of these crash situations (e.g., view orientation of the cyclist and the car driver- manoeuvre intention) and thus, form an appropriate basis for the development of Test Scenarios. Results Latest information on car-to-cyclist crashes in Europe was compiled including details on the related crash configurations, driving directions, outcome in terms of injury severity, accident location, other environmental aspects and driver responsibilities. The majority of car-to-cyclist crashes occurred during daylight and in clear weather conditions. Car-to-cyclist crashes in which the vehicle was traveling straight and the cyclist is moving in line with the traffic were found to result in the greatest number of fatalities. Considering also slightly and seriously injured cyclists led to a different order of crash patterns according to the three considered European countries. Finally the paper introduced the Use Cases derived from the crash data analysis. A total of 29 Use Cases were derived considering the group of seriously or fatally injured cyclists and 35 Use Cases were derived considering the group of slightly, seriously or fatally injured cyclists. The highest ranked Use Case describes the collision between a car turning to the nearside and a cyclist riding on a bicycle lane against the usual driving direction. A unified European dataset on car-to-cyclist crash scenarios is not available as the data available in CARE is limited, hence national datasets had to be used for the study and further work will be required to extrapolate the results to a European level. Due to the large number of Use Cases, the paper shows only highest ranked ones.
Powered Two Wheelers (PTWs) accidents constitute one of the road safety problems in Europe. PTWs fatalities represent 22% at EU level in 2006, having increased during last years, representing an opposite trend compared to other road users" figures. In order to reduce these figures it is necessary to investigate the accident causation mechanisms from different points of view (e.g.: human factor, vehicle characteristics, influence of the environment, type of accident). SAFERIDER project ("Advanced telematics for enhancing the SAFEty and comfort of motorcycle RIDERs", under the European Commission "7th Framework Program") has investigated PTW accident mechanisms through literature review and statistical analyses of National and In-depth accident databases; detecting and describing all the possible PTW's accident configurations where the implementation of ADAS (Advanced Driver Assistance Systems) and IVIS (In-Vehicle Information Systems) could contribute to avoid an accident or mitigate its severity. DIANA, the Spanish in-depth database developed by CIDAUT, has been analyzed for that purpose. DIANA comprises of accident investigation teams, in close cooperation with police forces, medical services, forensic surgeons, garages and scrap yards. An important innovation is the fact that before injured people arrive to hospitals, photographs and explanations about the possible accident injury mechanisms are sent to the respective hospitals (via 3G GPRS technology). By this, additional information to medical staff can be provided in order to predict in advance possible internal injuries and select the best medical treatment. This methodology is presented in this paper. On the other hand, the main results (corresponding to road, rider and PTW characteristics; pre and post-accident manoeuvres; road layout; rider behaviour; impact points; accident causations;...) from the analyses of the PTW accidents used for SAFERIDER are shown. Only accident types relevant to ADAS and IVIS devices have been considered.
In Germany the number of casualties in passenger car to pedestrian crashes has been reduced by a considerable amount of 40% as regards fatalities and 25% with regard to seriously injured pedestrians since the year 2001. Similar trends can be seen in other European countries. The reasons for that positive development are still under investigation. As infrastructural or behavioral changes do in general take a longer time to be effective in real world, explanations related to improved active and passive safety of passenger vehicles can be more relevant in providing answers for this trend. The effect of passive pedestrian protection " specified by the Euro NCAP pedestrian test result " is of particular interest and has already been analyzed by several authors. However, the number of vehicles with some valid Euro NCAP pedestrian score (post 2002 rating) was quite limited in most of those studies. To overcome this problem of small datasets German National Accident Records have been taken to investigate a similar objective but now based on a much bigger dataset. The paper uses German National Accident Records from the years 2009 to 2011. In total 65.140 records of pedestrian to passenger car crashes have been available. Considering crash parameters like accident location (rural / urban areas) etc., 27.143 of those crashes have been classified to be relevant for the analysis of passive pedestrian safety. In those 27.143 records 7.576 Euro NCAP rated vehicles (post 2002 rating) have been identified. In addition it was possible to identify vehicles which comply with pedestrian protection legislation (2003/102/EG) where phase 1 came into force in October 2005. A significant correlation between Euro NCAP pedestrian score and injury outcome in real-life car to pedestrian crashes was found. Comparing a vehicle scoring 5 points and a vehicle scoring 22 points, pedestrians" conditional probability of getting fatally injured is reduced by 35% (from 0.58% to 0.37%) for the later one. At the same time the probability of serious injuries can be reduced by 16% (from 27.4% to 22.9%). No significant injury reducing effect, associated with the introduction of pedestrian protection legislation (phase 1) was detected. Considerable effects have also been identified comparing diesel and gasoline cars. Higher engine displacements are associated with a lower injury risk for pedestrians. The most relevant parameter has been "time of accident", whereas pedestrians face a more than 2 times higher probability to be fatally injured during night and darkness as compared to daytime conditions.
Ausgehend von den Unfalldaten der letzten Jahre wird die Bedeutung von Fußgängerunfällen im Unfallgeschehen dargestellt. Betrachtet man die bei Unfällen getöteten Verkehrsteilnehmer, so sind am häufigsten Personen in Kraftfahrzeugen betroffen. Am zweithäufigsten werden, gemäß der Unfallstatistik, Fußgänger getötet. Eine Möglichkeit zur Verbesserung des Schutzes von Fußgängern und anderen sogenannten "ungeschützten Verkehrsteilnehmern" im Falle einer Kollision mit einem Kraftfahrzeug sind Maßnahmen am Fahrzeug. Um die Wirksamkeit derartiger Maßnahmen zu beurteilen, wurde durch das EEVC (European Enhanced Vehicle-Safety Committee) ein Prüfverfahren entwickelt. Es handelt sich dabei um ein Komponentenprüfverfahren, mit dem die Frontstruktur von Fahrzeugen, die bei einer Kollision mit einem Fußgänger hauptsächlich betroffen ist, geprüft wird. Es werden keine den gesamten Menschen repräsentierende Dummies verwendet, stattdessen werden Prüfkörper, die einzelne Körperteile simulieren, eingesetzt. Dieser EEVC Vorschlag wird geschildert. Darüber hinaus wird über Aktivitäten außerhalb des EEVC berichtet, sowie über den aktuellen Stand der Bemühungen der Europäischen Kommission in Bezug auf den Fußgängerschutz, die derzeit, auf Grundlage des Prüfvorschlages des EEVC, einen Vorschlag für eine Europäische Richtlinie erarbeitet.
Since its beginning in 1999, the German In-Depth Accident Study (GIDAS) evolved into the presumably leading representative road traffic accident investigation in Europe, based on the work started in Hanover in 1973. The detailed and comprehensive description of traffic accidents forms an essential basis for vehicle safety research. Due to the ongoing extension of demands of researchers, there is a continuous progress in the techniques and systematic of accident investigation within GIDAS. This paper presents some of the most important developments over the last years. Primary vehicle safety systems are expected to have a significant and increasing influence on reducing accidents. GIDAS therefore began to include and collect active safety parameters as new variables from the year 2005 onwards. This will facilitate to assess the impact of present and future active safety measures. A new system to analyse causation factors of traffic accidents, called ACASS, was implemented in GIDAS in the year 2008. The whole process of data handling was optimised. Since 2005 the on-scene data acquisition is completely conducted with mobile tablet PCs. Comprehensive plausibility checks assure a high data quality. Multi-language codebooks are automatically generated from the database structure itself and interfaces ensure the connection to various database management systems. Members of the consortium can download database and codebook, and synchronize half a terabyte of photographic documentation through a secured online access. With the introduction of the AIS 2005 in the year 2006, some medical categorizations have been revised. To ensure the correct assignment of AIS codes to specific injuries an application based on a diagnostic dictionary was developed. Furthermore a coding tool for the AO classification was introduced. All these enhancements enable GIDAS to be up to date for future research questions.
EEVC Working Group 15 (Compatibility Between Passenger Cars) has carried out research for several years thanks to collaborative project funded by the E.C. and also by exchanging results of projects funded by national programmes. The main collaborative activity of the EEVC WG15 for the last four years was a research project partly funded by the European Commission, where the group made the first attempt to investigate compatibility between passenger cars in a comprehensive research program. Accident, crash test, and mathematical modelling data were analysed. The main result was that structural incompatibilities were frequently found and identified as the main source of incompatibility problems but were not easy to quantify. Unfortunately as little vehicle information other than mass is recorded in most accident databases, most analyses have only been able to show the effect of mass or mass ratio. Common ideas to improve compatibility have been reached by this group and from discussion with other research groups. They will be investigated in the next phase, where research work will concentrate on the development of methods to assess compatibility of passenger cars. The main idea is that the prerequisite to improve crash compatibility between cars is to improve structural interaction. The most important issue is that improved compatibility must not compromise a vehicle- self protection. Test methods should lead to vehicles which show good structural interaction in car to car accidents. Test methods to prove good compatibility may be an adaptation of existing regulatory test procedures (offset deformable barrier test or full width test like in the USA) for frontal impact or may be new compatibility tests. Additional criteria, e.g. impact force distribution, and maximum vehicle deceleration or maximum vehicle impact force should result in compatible cars. Attempts will be made to estimate the benefit of a more compatible car fleet for the European Community.
At the 2001 ESV-Conference the EEVC working group on compatibility (WG 15) reported the first phase of the research work to investigate the major factors influencing compatibility between passenger cars. Following this, WG15 performed an interim study, which was partly subventioned by the European Commission, the results of which are reported in this paper. In the next phase of work, it is intended to complete the development of a suite of test procedures and associated performance criteria to assess the compatibility of passenger cars in frontal impacts The main areas of work for the interim study were: - in depth accident data analysis - the development of methods to assess the potential benefit of improved compatibility - crash testing. The accident analysis identified the major compatibility problems to be poor structural interaction, stiffness mismatching and compartment strength. Different methods to assess the potential benefit of improved compatibility were applied to in depth accident data. Full scale crash testing including a car to car test was performed to help develop the following candidate compatibility test procedures: - a full width wall test with a deformable aluminium honeycomb face and a high resolution load cell wall - an offset barrier test with the EEVC barrier face and a high resolution load cell wall - an offset barrier test with the progressively deformable barrier (PDB) face. The results of the interim study will be presented in detail and the proposed methodology of the next phase to complete the development of a suite of test procedures for the assessment of car to car compatibility in frontal impacts will be outlined
Insbesondere auf Landstraßen, das heißt außerorts ohne Bundesautobahnen, hat sich in den letzten Jahren ein deutlicher Rückgang bei den Unfällen mit Pkw gezeigt. Von 2001 bis 2005 ist die Zahl der bei Landstraßenunfällen Getöteten von 4.481 auf cirka 3.230 zurückgegangen. Als eine wesentliche Ursache für diese positive Entwicklung wird die stetige Verbesserung der aktiven und passiven Sicherheit von Fahrzeugen angesehen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde untersucht, inwieweit sich in der amtlichen Unfallstatistik Belege für diese Vermutung finden lassen. Ob die Wirkung straßeninfrastrukturseitiger Maßnahmen auf Landstraßenunfälle mit dem gewählten Ansatz analog nachweisbar ist, wurde ebenfalls betrachtet. Der Einfluss fahrzeugseitiger Maßnahmen auf das Unfallgeschehen wurde zum einen für drei Systeme der aktiven Fahrzeugsicherheit Fahrdynamikregelungen (ESP), Bremsassistenten (BAS) und Gasentladungsscheinwerfer (XENON) Ń ermittelt. Zum anderen wurden Verbesserungen der passiven Fahrzeugsicherheit, wie Airbags oder auch die Einführung von Vorschriften zum Beispiel für Frontal- und Seitenaufprall, als Gesamtpaket betrachtet. Darüber hinaus wurden Einflussmöglichkeiten verbesserter Straßeninfrastruktur beziehungsweise -ausstattung erörtert. Für die ausgewählten Sicherheitseinrichtungen wurden geeignete Teilmengen aus dem Unfallgeschehen ausgewählt, bei denen sich der Einfluss der Fahrzeugtechnik erwarten lässt. Diese wurden dann mit Unfallsituationen verglichen, in denen die Maßnahmen keine Wirkung zeigen sollten. Im Einzelnen konnten folgende Ergebnisse aus den Auswertungen des Unfallgeschehens abgeleitet werden: Die Zahl der Unfälle in ESP-relevanten Situationen ist bei neuen Fahrzeugen, in denen ESP zu einem hohen Anteil verbaut ist, deutlich und überproportional zurückgegangen. Hier ist zwischen den Jahren 2000 und 2005 ein Rückgang der Landstraßenunfälle mit Personenschaden und der schwerwiegenden Unfälle mit Sachschaden in Höhe von 28 % eingetreten. Der positive Effekt des ESP zeigt sich auch an der Zahl der schweren Personenschäden (Getötete und Schwerverletzte). Insgesamt ergibt sich für den Rückgang der schweren Personenschäden in ESP-relevanten Situationen auf Landstraßen unter Berücksichtigung der Unfälle älterer Pkw sowie der Unfälle in Vergleichssituationen ein Wert von 13 %. Das Unfallgeschehen in BAS-relevanten Situationen hat sich sowohl für Neufahrzeuge als auch für ältere Fahrzeuge gleichermaßen, aber überproportional verbessert (-31 % Unfälle für BAS-relevante Situationen gegenüber -20 % für nicht BAS-relevante). Ein Sicherheitsvorteil allein durch BAS lässt sich mit den vorliegenden Zahlen somit nicht eindeutig nachweisen. Dass auch ältere Fahrzeuge in der BAS-Situation einen starken Rückgang aufweisen, deutet darauf hin, dass es neben dem BAS weitere Faktoren gibt, die diese Situation positiv beeinflussen, die aber nicht identifiziert sind. Hier könnte ABS, das in der gleichen Situation wirkt wie BAS und auch noch bei älteren Fahrzeugen wachsende Ausstattungsquoten zeigt, eine Rolle spielen. Rückgänge in den Unfallzahlen fallen für Neufahrzeuge in den XENON-relevanten Situationen etwas stärker aus als bei älteren Pkw (-34 % gegenüber -28 %). Daraus lassen sich, vermutlich bedingt durch die geringen Änderungen der Ausstattungsquote, jedoch in dieser Untersuchung keine Sicherheitsvorteile durch Gasentladungslicht ableiten, da der Rückgang gleichermaßen auch in der Vergleichssituation auftritt. Gleichzeitig deutet die Unfallentwicklung in Abhängigkeit vom Fahrzeugalter jedoch darauf hin, dass auch in der XENON-Situation andere Maßnahmen, die zum Beispiel der passiven Fahrzeugsicherheit zuzuordnen sind, wirksam sein müssen. Die Rückgänge der Unfallschwere (Anzahl der Getöteten und Schwerverletzten je 100 Pkw-Fahrer bei Unfällen mit Personenschaden) in Unfällen mit entgegenkommenden Fahrzeugen (relevante Situation für die passive Sicherheit) sind bei Fahrern von Neufahrzeugen am größten (-42 % gegenüber -14 % bei älteren Fahrzeugen). Dies zeigt eindeutig die Wirkung verbesserter Systeme der passiven Fahrzeugsicherheit wie Airbags, Gurtstraffer und -kraftbegrenzer sowie optimierte Fahrzeugstruktur beziehungsweise Fahrgastzelle. Deutliche Rückgänge in der Unfallschwere bei den sonstigen Unfällen von Neufahrzeugen zeigen, dass sich die ständig weiterentwickelte passive Sicherheit auch in anderen Unfallkonstellationen, wie zum Beispiel seitlichen Kollisionen, bewährt. Im Straßeninfrastrukturbereich besteht das Problem, dass die wesentlichen Informationen für den hier gewählten Ansatz zur Ermittlung des Einflusses von Maßnahmen auf das Unfallgeschehen nicht verfügbar sind. Dafür müssten zum einen Daten über die Menge der umgesetzten Maßnahmen im Zeitverlauf vorliegen; zum anderen müsste es eine Vergleichsgruppe geben (Unfälle, die durch die Maßnahme nicht beeinflusst wurden). Maßnahmen und Nicht-Maßnahmen müssten dabei räumlich und/oder zeitlich abgrenzbar sein. Es zeigt sich, dass diese Daten für die meisten Maßnahmen im Infrastrukturbereich nicht vorliegen, sodass mit Hilfe der amtlichen Unfallstatistik keine Untersuchungen zur Wirksamkeit durchgeführt werden können. Hier sind demnach andere Untersuchungsansätze anzuwenden.