Sonstige
Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Book (26)
- Conference Proceeding (26)
- Article (3)
- Working Paper (1)
Keywords
- Geschwindigkeit (56) (remove)
Institute
- Sonstige (56) (remove)
Motorcycle crashes in Austria: Analysis of causes and contributing factors based on in-depth data
(2017)
From CEDATU, the in-depth accident database run by the Vehicle Safety Institute at Graz University of Technology, a representative sample of 101 crashes involving at least one motorcycle was selected. The analysis focused on causes for crashes as well as on contributing factors, but also included parameters of road, riders and vehicles. Own riding speed and "unexpectable action by another road user" were the most frequent causes for accidents. Inappropriate safety distance or delayed reaction were frequent, both as causation factors and as contributing factors. Infrastructure issues never cause an accident, but they are very frequent as contributing factors; road geometry and road guidance are by far most frequent among these. This paper also discusses accidents by type and other parameters (e.g. injury severity by body region, collision speed, age and others), and compares accident causes to previous studies as well as the police reported accident statistics.
Pedestrian accidents are one of the major concerns related with road accidents around the world. Portugal has one of the highest rates of pedestrian fatalities in Europe. In this paper an overview conditions were the pedestrian accidents occurred in Portugal is presented. In the last years, a project related with the pedestrian accidents has run in Portugal for the period 2004-2006 where 603 people died, 2097 have been severely injured and about 17000 slightly injured. Within this project all the pedestrian accidents in this period have been analysed providing global information about a wide range of aspects, since location, driver and pedestrian characteristics, weather and road conditions, among others. In addition, 50 in-depth accidents have been investigated and the data collected according the Pendant methodology. For this in-depth methodology detailed information about the accident has been collected, including injuries, vehicle damage, road conditions and road user- behaviour and actions. An accident reconstruction has been carried for each case including the determination of the speeds and driver actions, and the analysis of the contributing factors for the accident. Depending of the accident complexity, different methodologies have been used to analyse these accident, from the classical analytical equations such as Simms and Woods, to the use of detailed computational pedestrian models as those included in the commercial software- PC-Crash-® or Madymo-®. Also one of the goals of our investigation is the development of multibody models and methodologies for the reconstruction of pedestrian accidents. Some of these tools integrated in the commercial software Cosmos Motion-® are presented. The advantages of the different approaches are compared and discussed for some of the accidents investigated. With these tools the impact speed can be determined from the projection distance with analytical tools or PC-Crash-®, but more complex tools should be used to determine speed from the injuries, what is especially important for fatal accidents. The influence of the vehicle geometry and stiffness characteristics is another aspect analysed, where the influence of the vehicle stiffness has been determined using a combined multibody-finite elements approach within the software Madymo-®.
Im Rahmen eines Gemeinschaftsprojektes der Technischen Universität München und des ADAC, Abteilung Verkehrstechnik, wurden im süddeutschen Autobahnnetz 4 Messstellen eingerichtet, an denen seit 1976 bzw. 1977 monatliche lokale Geschwindigkeiten und Fahrzeugabstände erhoben werden. Von der Bundesanstalt für straßenwesen wurden seit 1978 sieben weitere Messstellen auf dem nord- und westdeutschen Autobahnnetz eingerichtet, an denen zweimal jährlich Messungen durchgeführt werden. Damit können Trends und Entwicklungen im Geschwindigkeits- und Abstandsverhalten erkannt werden. Der Bericht gliedert sich in die Beschreibung der Voruntersuchung, die Beschreibung der Erweiterung der Analyse auf das Autobahnnetz und die Darstellung der Ergebnisse aller Erhebungen. Ein Rückschluss auf das absolute Geschwindigkeitsniveau im Gesamtnetz kann aus den Ergebnissen der einzelnen Messstellen nicht abgeleitet werden.
Es wurde anhand einer ersten Auswertung der Messdaten an der autobahnähnlichen B10 bei Karlsruhe und anhand einer Systematisierung weiterer zugänglicher PM10-Messergebnisse an Straßen im Anwendungsbereich des Merkblattes über Luftverunreinigungen an Straßen (MLuS 02) eine bessere Anpassung des existierenden Verfahrens zur Berechnung verkehrsbedingter PM10-Emissionen im Sinne einer schnell verfügbaren pragmatischen Zwischenlösung für diese Straßen erarbeitet. Mittels der NOx-Tracermethode konnten für die B10 bei Karlsruhe PM10-Emissionsfaktoren abgeleitet werden. Diese betragen im Wochenmittel 81 mg/(km Fzg), wobei an trockenen Werktagen 92 mg/(km Fzg) und an trockenen Sonntagen 59 mg/(km Fzg) ermittelt wurden. Anhand der Auswertung der Inhaltsstoffanalysen wurde u.a. abgeschätzt, dass an trockenen Werktagen ca. 50 % der PM10-Emissionen durch Auspuffemissionen realisiert werden, ca. 20 % durch Reifenabrieb, weniger als 1 % durch Bremsabriebe und ca. 30 % durch Straßenabriebe sowie Wiederaufwirbelung von Schmutzeintrag. Es wurde in diesen Überlegungen angenommen, dass sich die PM10-Emissionen einer Straße aus den Emissionen des Auspuffs sowie dem Anteil aus Abrieb und dem der Aufwirbelung infolge Reifen-, Brems-, Kupplungsbelags- und Straßenabrieb sowie Straßenstaub zusammensetzen. Dabei werden die Emissionen aus dem Auspuff bestimmt nach dem Handbuch für Emissionsfaktoren des Umweltbundesamtes (HBEFA). Die Emissionen für Abrieb und Aufwirbelung wurden auf Basis von aus vorliegenden Messergebnissen abgeleiteten Emissionsfaktoren (getrennt nach PKW und LKW) berechnet. Entsprechende Emissionsfaktoren werden angegeben. Unterschieden wird nach nicht überdeckelten Straßen und Tunnelstrecken. Für Tunnelstrecken, auf denen die Emissionen offenbar geringer sind als auf offenen Straßen, werden niedrigere PKW-Emissionsfaktoren angesetzt als für Straßen auf freier Strecke. Unterschieden wird auch weiterhin in Straßen mit gutem bzw. schlechtem Straßenzustand. Eine eindeutige Geschwindigkeitsabhängigkeit konnte aus den verfügbaren Daten nicht abgeleitet werden. Auch die Regenabhängigkeit ist weiterhin nicht eindeutig geklärt. Für die Bestimmung der Kurzzeitbelastung nach 22. BImSchV für PM10 und CO wurde auf Basis der Auswertung von Messdaten ein statistischer Zusammenhang abgeleitet für die Berechnung der Anzahl von Überschreitungen von 50 -µg PM10/m-³ als Tagesmittelwert beziehungsweise zur Bestimmung des maximalen gleitenden CO-8h-Wertes aus dem jeweiligen Jahresmittelwert. Der Bericht wurde um eine Zusatzuntersuchung zum Vergleich der PM10-Konzentrationen aus Messungen an der A1 bei Hamburg und Ausbreitungsberechnungen erweitert. Diese Zusatzuntersuchung enthält als Anhänge eine Fehlerdiskussion, eine Darstellung des Berechnungsverfahrens PROKAS zur Bestimmung verkehrserzeugter Schadstoffbelastungen sowie die MLuS 02-Protokolle zum PC - Berechnungsverfahren zur Abschätzung von verkehrsbedingten Schadstoffimmissionen nach dem Merkblatt über Luftverunreinigungen an Straßen der Forschungsgesellschaft für Straßen- und Verkehrswesen, Version 5.0j vom 26.02.2002.
This paper describes the methodology of In-Depth Investigation in Germany on the example of GIDAS (German In-Depth Accident Study). Since 1999 in Germany a joint project between FAT (Forschungsvereinigung Automobiltechnik or Automotive Industry Research Association) and BASt (Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen or the Federal Road Research Institute) is being carried out in Hannover and Dresden. The methodology of this project is based on a statistically orientated procedure of data sampling (sampling plan, weighting factors). The paper describes the possibilities of such in-depth investigation on the results of the offered title. The accident cases were collected randomly within GIDAS at Hannover. There are more cases existing from previous investigation started in 1985 under the same methodology. The portion of rollovers can be established at 3.7% of all accidents with casualties in the year 2000. For the study 434 cases of car accidents with rollovers are used for a detail comprehensive analysis. The accidents happened in the years 1994 to 2000 in the Hannover area. The injury distribution will report about 741 occupants with rollover accident event. The presented paper will give an overview of the accident situations following in rollover movements of cars. The distributions of injury frequencies, injury severity AIS for the whole body and for the body regions of occupants will be presented and compared to technical details like the impact speed and the deformation pattern. The speed of the car was determined at the point of rollover and on the point of accident initiency. The characteristics of the kinematics followed in a rollover movement are analyzed and the major defined types of rollover will be shown in the paper. The paper will describe the possibilities of In-Depth Investigation methods for the approach of finding countermeasures on the example of car accidents with rollover and explaining the biomechanics of injuries in rollover movements.
Bone fracture patterns could be crucial in reconstructing the nature of loading, especially in the lower limb and upper limb kinematics in vehicle-pedestrian crashes. In addition, use of FE bone models can be a handy tool to predict vehicle impact velocity and the impact direction. The point of fracture initiation in bone loading has been predicted quite accurately earlier. A methodology that predicts bone crack initiation and its propagation pattern for the six known loading directions using a single material and failure model is presented.
Relevant accident related factors : risk and frequencies of contributing to road traffic accidents
(2009)
In the course of the European Project TRACE (Traffic Accident Causation in Europe) an attempt was made to analyse the cause of road traffic accidents from a factors' point of view. By literature review the most important independent risk factors for traffic accidents were identified to be speed, alcohol intake, male gender, young age, cell phone use, and fatigue. However, the impact of an accident related factor also depends on its prevalence in traffic and accidents, respectively. Available to the Partners in the TRACE Project were different accident databases. Causally contributing factors found by accident investigations that are most often coded in accident databases are connected to unadapted speed and inattention. Taking into account the risk increase and the frequency of contribution to accidents the conclusion can be drawn that the most relevant factors for accident causation are: "alcohol", "speed", and "inattention and distraction".
Rollover scenarios in Europe
(2005)
Rollover accidents seem to be a rising problem in Europe and therefore the systematic of this accident scenario should be investigated. Based on statistical investigations on major European accident databases for different countries a series of 73 real world rollover accidents was analysed. These cases were reconstructed using PC-Crash and preliminary categorised using a modified USbased rollover classification. In a first step, the rollover events were reconstructed from the point of conflict to the vehicle- rest position. The vehicles kinematics as well as its linear and rotational velocities were derived. In a second step typical velocity characteristics as well as kinematics were identified and the events categorised according to these criteria. Based on these results four main categories were defined, covering all reconstructed accidents. This categorisation was based on mechanical parameters (rotatory and translator kinematical data of the vehicle). Significant differences can be seen for different scenarios for the "first phase of rollover".
In a first step, we have examined approximately 23 000 single vehicle accidents within the Austrian National Statistics database. In a second step, we considered 15% of all fatal "running off the road" accidents that occurred in Austria in 2003. As a result, two accident categories were specified; "leaving the road without preceding manoeuvre" and "leaving the road with preceding manoeuvre". These two categories can be basically characterised by the vehicle- heading angle and its velocity angle. In this report, we further suggest theoretical approaches for the dimensioning of a safety zone, an area adjacent to the road free of fixed objects or dangerous slopes. We also show the link between the two accident categories mentioned above and the real world accidents analysed in detail. These observations also form the basis for the required length for safety devices. Finally, we summarise accident avoidance strategies.
The main focus of the benefit estimation of advanced safety systems with a warning interface by simulation is on the driver. The driver is the only link between the algorithm of the safety system and the vehicle, which makes the setup of a driver model for such simulations very important. This paper describes an approach for the use of a statistical driver model in simulation. It also gives an outlook on further work on this topic. The build-up process of the model suffices with a distribution of reaction times and a distribution of reaction intensities. Both were combined in different scenarios for every driver. Each scenario has then a specific probability to occur. To use the statistical driver model, every accident scene has to be simulated with each driver scenario (combinations of reaction times and intensities). The results of the simulations are then combined regarding the probabilities to occur, which leads to an overall estimated benefit of the specific system. The model works with one or more equipped participants and delivers a range for the benefit of advanced safety systems with warning interfaces.