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Auf Brücken, insbesondere auf Stahlbrücken, bildet sich im Winter gegenüber den anderen Streckenabschnitten oft vorzeitig Glätte. Dadurch kann der Straßenverkehr in erheblichem Maße gefährdet werden. Es gibt verschiedene Möglichkeiten das vorzeitige Auftreten von Glätte zu verhindern. Die derzeit gebräuchlichsten Methoden sind die Brücken vorzeitig zu streuen oder automatische Taumittelsprühanlagen zu installieren. In dem vorliegenden Projekt wurde eine weitere, innovative Methode untersucht, nämlich die Temperierung der Fahrbahn mit Hilfe von Geothermie. Dazu wurden Simulationsreihen und damit zusammenhängende praxisnahe Messungen durchgeführt. Die Messungen wurden auf einer eigens hierfür hergestellten Testbrücke aus Stahl-Brückenmodulen sowie in weiteren Testfeldern auf bestehenden Brücken vorgenommen. Der Bericht stellt wichtige Informationen und Ergebnisse zur Verfügung, die notwendig sind, um ein Brücken-Projekt mit Fahrbahn-Temperierung zu planen und umzusetzen. Dabei werden die Aspekte - konstruktive Gestaltung, - thermische Eigenschaften, - mechanische Festigkeit, - Regelstrategien und " Wirtschaftlichkeit eines solchen Systems betrachtet. Weiterhin enthält der Bericht Beispiele, welche Varianten hinsichtlich des geothermischen Systems möglich sind, und gibt Eckdaten zu deren Dimensionierung an. Nach den hier vorliegenden Ergebnissen ist die Realisierung eines Fahrbahn-Temperierungs-Systems mittels Geothermie für Stahlbrücken möglich. Die thermische Leistung ist für den angestrebten Zweck ausreichend. Hinsichtlich der mechanischen Eigenschaften konnten zumindest keine kurzfristig erkennbaren Beeinträchtigungen festgestellt werden, wobei hier weiterer Forschungsbedarf besteht. Damit bietet die geothermische Fahrbahntemperierung die Möglichkeit, umweltschonend zur Vermeidung von frühzeitiger Glättebildung auf Straßenbrücken beizutragen.
Als Ergebnis des Forschungsvorhabens wurde ein Simulationsverfahren für die Ermittlung von Streckenkapazitäten auf Bundesautobahnen (BAB) bei winterlichen Straßenzuständen erarbeitet. Der Berechnungsansatz wurde auf eine robuste Verfahrensweise ausgelegt, um die Auswirkungen von Ungenauigkeiten und Fehlern der Eingangsgrößen zu minimieren. Das Verfahren orientiert sich an den technischen Rahmenbedingungen wie z.B. die Eigenschaften der derzeit verfügbaren Daten der Wetterprognose und der Umfelddatenerfassung. Zugleich werden die Anforderungen an die Nutzung der Prognoseergebnisse berücksichtigt. Ausgehend von einer Grundkapazität der Streckenabschnitte in Anlehnung an das Handbuch für die Bemessung von Straßenverkehrsanlagen (HBS) wurden Abschlagsfaktoren für die jeweils vorherrschende Witterungssituation ermittelt. Diese Witterungseigenschaften wurden zuvor anhand charakteristischer Eingangsgrößen zusammengefasst und als Wetterklassen definiert. Das nachgeschaltete Prognoseverfahren ist als zweistufiger Ansatz mit einer Planungsprognose für die vorausschauende Disposition sowie einer Kurzfristdarstellung für die operative Durchführung der Verkehrsmanagements, des Straßenbetriebsdienstes und des Arbeitsstellenmanagements aufgebaut. Es basiert auf einem Warteschlangenmodell. Die Ergebnisse zeigen mögliche Stauereignisse auf und können als Entscheidungshilfe verwendet werden. Beide Komponenten setzen auf den gleichen grundsätzlichen Vorgehensweisen für die Prognose auf. Es bleibt offensichtlich, dass die Güte der Wetterprognose für die korrekte Auswahl der Wetterklasse entscheidend ist. Die Zuverlässigkeit der nachfolgend aufgesetzten Prognose des Verkehrsablaufs korreliert daher unmittelbar mit der Qualität der Eingangsgröße Wetterprognose. Aus diesem Grund ist der Bereitstellung hochwertiger und kleinräumiger Wetterprognosen für den Straßenbetriebsdienst die erforderliche Aufmerksamkeit zu widmen. Die im Forschungsvorhaben entwickelte modelltechnische Abbildung der witterungsbedingten Kapazitätseinschränkung und ihrer Auswirkungen auf den Verkehrsablauf durch zwei Risikostufen in Form einer "Warnung" und eines "Alarms" hat sich in der Evaluierung bewährt. Dabei ist die betriebsnahe Interpretation der Prognoseergebnisse möglich. Das Verfahren mit den Vorhersagen des Verkehrszustands Eingangsgrößen beweist, dass sie als Auslösekriterien für Maßnahmen des Verkehrsmanagements genutzt werden können.
The paper presents a methodology for the benefit estimation of several secondary safety systems for pedestrians, using the exceptional data depth of GIDAS. A total of 667 frontal pedestrian accidents up to 40kph and more than 500 AIS2+ injuries have been considered. In addition to the severity, affected body region, exact impact point on the vehicle, and the causing part of every injury, the related Euro NCAP test zone was determined. One results of the study is a detailed impact distribution for AIS2+ injuries across the vehicle front. It can be stated, how often a test zone or vehicle part is hit by pedestrians in frontal accidents and which role the ground impact plays. Basing on that, different secondary safety measures can be evaluated by an injury shift method concerning their real world effectiveness. As an example, measures concerning the Euro NCAP pedestrian rating tests have been evaluated. It was analysed which Euro NCAP test zones are the most effective ones. In addition, real test results have been evaluated. Using the presented methodology, other secondary safety like the active bonnet (pop-up bonnet) or a pedestrian airbag measures can be evaluated.
Tree impacts are still one of the most important focal points of road deaths in Germany. For the year 2008, the latest figures in the national statistics show a share of 28% of road users killed in crashes with trees alongside a road amongst all crashes on rural roads (except the Autobahn). The official German statistics show the attribute "impact on a tree" since 1995. For this first reported year, the share of road users killed in such crashes was 30%. During the last 14 years, fatal accidents with road users killed on rural roads (except the Autobahn) after impacts on a tree declined by 60% from 1,737 (year 1995) to 696 (year 2008). But this is more or less in line with the general evolution of vehicle and traffic safety in Germany. For Germany as a whole the accident statistics do not show a reduction for "treer crashes" which is clearly more than the average for all accidents. But, as shown with the paper, there are different evolutions in the several German States. In public awareness the topic "tree impacts" is mostly associated with the situation in Germany after the reunification. At that time a lot of road users were killed on the avenues in the so called "new countries". The fact that "tree impacts" are still a big share within the figure of killed road users seems to be little-known. Using updated information coming from the official statistics and in-depth-studies, accident researchers can identify a big potential for further improvements of traffic safety on the associated district roads, state roads and federal highways. There is still a need to analyse more details of the accident occurrence with impacts on trees to generate new and updated findings on the current limits and potentials of measures to improve vehicle and traffic safety. To make further efforts in reducing the figures of victims of "tree impacts" the intensification of well-known conventional solutions " for example implementation of guard rails and reduction of speed - is an option. Measures related to vehicle safety technology especially in the field of primary (active) safety will have additional benefit within the physically imposed limits. With this background it can be seen that the subject "tree impacts" should be analysed with a holistic approach taking into account the entire system of driver, vehicle, road, the environment and a social consensus as well.
Looking at the total of sum of fatal car accidents the number of single-vehicle accidents and particularly run-offroad (ROR) accidents are most frequent. In Austria on the Autobahn ROR accidents amounts to almost 45% of all fatal accidents, i.e. nearly every second fatal accident is caused by ROR accidents and interaction with infrastructure. Approximately 43 people were killed on Autobahns in ROR accidents with passenger cars. One possibility of protection against impacts with infrastructure is the use of guardrails. However, the initial element identified as a turned down terminal could become a dangerous impact object. These turned down terminals may lead a vehicle to roll over or the car "takes-off" when impacting the turned down guardrail. In many cases it is reported that the vehicle is jumping into road side objects such as traffic sign poles or overpasses. On average, nine people are killed in such accidents every year in Austria.
Small overlap frontal crashes are defined by a damage pattern with most of the vehicle deformation concentrated outboard of the main longitudinal structures. These crashes are prominent among frontal crashes resulting in serious and fatal injuries, even among vehicles that perform well in regulatory and consumer information crash tests. One of the critical aspects of understanding these crashes is knowing the crash speeds that cause the types of damage associated with serious injuries. Laboratory crash tests were conducted using 12 vehicles in three small overlap test conditions: pole, vehicle-to-vehicle collinear, and vehicle-to-vehicle oblique (15-degree striking angle). Field reconstruction techniques were used to estimate the delta V for each vehicle, and these results were compared with actual delta V values based on vehicle accelerometer data. Estimated delta Vs were 50% lower than actual values. Velocity change estimates for small overlap frontal crashes in databases such as NASS-CDS significantly underestimate actual values.
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.
Pedestrian and cyclist are the most vulnerable road users in traffic crashes. One important aspect of this study was the comparable analysis of the exact impact configuration and the resulting injury patterns of pedestrians and cyclists in view of epidemiology. The secondary aim was assessment of head injury risks and kinematics of adult pedestrian and cyclists in primary and secondary impacts and to correlate the injuries related to physical parameters like HIC value, 3ms linear acceleration, and discuss the technical parameter with injuries observed in real-world accidents based documented real accidents of GIDAS and explains the head injuries by simulated load and impact conditions based on PC-Crash and MADYMO. A subsample of n=402 pedestrians and n=940 bicyclists from GIDAS database, Germany was used for preselection, from which 22 pedestrian and 18 cyclist accidents were selected for reconstruction by initially using PC-Crash to calculate impact conditions, such as vehicle impact velocity, vehicle kinematic sequence and throw out distance. The impact conditions then were employed to identify the initial conditions in simulation of MADYMO reconstruction. The results show that cyclists always suffer lower injury outcomes for the same accident severity. Differences in HIC, head relative impact velocity, 3ms linear contiguous acceleration, maximum angular velocity and acceleration, contact force, throwing distance and head contact timing are shown. The differences of landing conditions in secondary impacts of pedestrians and cyclists are also identified. Injury risk curves were generated by logistic regression model for each predicting physical parameters.
The accident research of Hanover and (from 1999 on) Dresden registered 736 leg injuries (AIS ≥ 2) from 1983 to March 2007. 174 of these injuries (23.6 %) were fractures or dislocations of foot and ankle. 149 feet of 141 front seat car occupants in 140 cars were affected. Of these 117 were drivers, 24 were front seat passengers. The mean age of occupants was 38.5 -± 16.8 years. Ankle fractures were the most frequent injury (n = 82; 80 malleolar fractures, 2 pilon fractures). 34 fractures and dislocations affected the hindfoot (5 talus and 26 calcaneal fractures, 2 subtalar dislocations and 1 subtotal amputation) , 16 to midfoot (4 navicular fractures, 5 cuboid fractures, 3 fractures of cuneiformia, 2 dislocations of chopart joint, 1 subtotal amputation, and one severe decollement) and 39 the forefoot (metatarsal fractures). Open fractures were seldom seen (2 malleolar fractures, 1 metatarsal fracture). Both feet were injured in 10 cases. 33 occupants (23.4 %) were polytaumatic had a polytrauma, 17 of them died. 81 percent of the occupants were belted. The cars were divided in pre EuroNCAP (year of manufacture 1997 and older) and post EuroNCAP cars (year of manufacture 1998 and newer). Most of the foot injuries were seen in pre EuroNCAP cars. Most of the occupants sat in compact cars (40 drivers and 9 front seat passengers) and large family cars (27 drivers and 7 co-drivers). 49 of 140 accidents occurred on country roads, 26 on main roads and 13 on motorways. The crash direction was mostly frontal. Generally were found no differences of delta v- and EES-level between the injured foot regions, but divided into pre- and post-EuroNCAP cars there was a tendency to higher delta v- and EES-levels in newer cars. The frequency of foot injuries increased linearly with increasing delta v-level; but above delta v-level of 55 km/h the linear increase only was seen in pre-EuroNCAP cars, post-EuroNCAP cars showed no further increase of injuries. The footwell intrusion showed no difference between the injured foot regions but pre-EuroNCAP cars had a tendency to higher footwell intrusion. There were no differences in footwell intrusion between the car types. Only 29 of 174 fractures or dislocations of foot were seen in post-EuroNCAP cars, the predominate number of these injuries (n = 145) were noticed in pre-EuroNCAP cars. A lower probability of long-term impairment was found in post-EuroNCAP cars for equal delta v levels, using the AIS2008 associated Functional Capacity Index (FCI) for the foot region.
Unfortunately, there has been a high number of accident fatalities reported in the Czech Republic in recent years. There are many causes which have led to a growth in the number of road traffic accidents. Since 1990, traffic density has demonstrated an upward moving tendency, daily traffic-jams are on the increase in many cities and traffic capacity on roads and streets is not able to satisfy this increasing density. Moreover, many road users lack experience in terms of driving modern cars. The National Accident Study of the Czech Republic is based on the assumption that the year 2010 is considered as a pilot project with the testing operation of collecting and evaluating data from traffic accidents. From the beginning of 2011, a fully-functional structure of the Traffic Accident Research will be created and solid data generated. Based on this assumption, we hope to begin meaningful cooperation with foreign countries.