Filtern
Erscheinungsjahr
Dokumenttyp
- Wissenschaftlicher Artikel (523)
- Buch (Monographie) (258)
- Konferenzveröffentlichung (205)
- Teil eines Buches (Kapitel) (34)
- Sonstiges (21)
- Arbeitspapier (7)
Sprache
- Deutsch (860)
- Englisch (187)
- Mehrsprachig (1)
Volltext vorhanden
- nein (1048) (entfernen)
Schlagworte
- Sicherheit (246)
- Safety (243)
- Deutschland (221)
- Germany (220)
- Bewertung (182)
- Evaluation (assessment) (169)
- Unfall (158)
- Accident (156)
- Test (132)
- Versuch (130)
Institut
- Sonstige (328)
- Abteilung Straßenverkehrstechnik (216)
- Abteilung Verhalten und Sicherheit im Verkehr (197)
- Abteilung Straßenbautechnik (170)
- Abteilung Fahrzeugtechnik (162)
- Abteilung Brücken- und Ingenieurbau (121)
- Präsident (9)
- Zentralabteilung (8)
- Stabstelle Presse und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit (4)
- Stabstelle Forschungscontrolling, Qualitätsmanagement (1)
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.
A biofidelic flexible pedestrian legform impactor (FlexPLI) has been developed from the year 2000 onwards and evaluated by a technical evaluation group (Flex-TEG) of UN-ECE GRSP. A recently established UN-ECE GRSP Informal Group on GTR9 Phase 2 is aiming at introducing the FlexPLI within world-wide regulations on pedestrian safety (Phase 2 of GTR No. 9 as well as the new UN regulation 127 on pedestrian safety) as a test tool for the assessment of lower extremity injuries in lateral vehicle-to-pedestrian accidents. Besides, the FlexPLI has already been introduced within JNCAP and is on the Euro NCAP roadmap for 2014. Despite of the biofidelic properties in the knee and tibia sections, several open issues related to the FlexPLI, like the estimation of the cost benefit, the feasibility of vehicle compliance with the threshold values, the robustness of the impactor and of the test results, the comparability between prototype and production level and the finalization of certification corridors still needed to be solved. Furthermore, discussions with stakeholders about a harmonized lower legform to bumper test area are still going on. This paper describes several studies carried out by the Federal Highway Research Institute (BASt) regarding the benefit due to the introduction of the FlexPLI within legislation for type approval, the robustness of test results, the establishment of new assembly certification corridors and a proposal for a harmonized legform to bumper test area. Furthermore, a report on vehicle tests that previously had been carried out with three prototype legforms and were now being repeated using legforms with serial production status, is given. Finally, the paper gives a status report on the ongoing simulation and testing activities with respect to the development and evaluation of an improved test procedure with upper body mass for assessing pedestrian femur injuries.
Test and assessment procedures for passive pedestrian protection based on developments by the European Enhanced Vehicle-safety Committee (EEVC) have been introduced in world-wide regulations and consumer test programmes, with considerable harmonization between these programmes. Nevertheless, latest accident investigations reveal a stagnation of pedestrian fatality numbers on European roads running the risk of not meeting the European Union- goal of halving the number of road fatalities by the year 2020. The branch of external road user safety within the EC-funded research project SENIORS under the HORIZON 2020 framework programme focuses on investigating the benefit of modifications to pedestrian test and assessment procedures and their impactors for vulnerable road users with focus on the elderly. Injury patterns of pedestrians and cyclists derived from the German In-Depth Accident Study (GIDAS) show a trend of AIS 2+ and AIS 3+ injuries getting more relevant for the thorax region in crashes with newer cars (Wisch et al., 2017), while maintaining the relevance for head and lower extremities. Several crash databases from Europe such as GIDAS and the Swedish Traffic Accident Data Acquisition (STRADA) also show that head, thorax and lower extremities are the key affected body regions not only for the average population but in particular for the elderly. Therefore, the SENIORS project is focusing on an improvement of currently available impactors and procedures in terms of biofidelity and injury assessment ability towards a better protection of the affected body regions, incorporating previous results from FP 6 project APROSYS and subsequent studies carried out by BASt. The paper describes the overall methodology to develop revised FE impactor models. Matched human body model and impactor simulations against generic test rigs provide transfer functions that will be used for the derivation of impactor criteria from human injury risk functions for the affected body regions. In a later step, the refined impactors will be validated by simulations against actual vehicle front-ends. Prototyping and adaptation of test and assessment procedures as well as an impact assessment will conclude the work of the project at the final stage. The work will contribute to an improved protection of vulnerable road users focusing on the elderly. The use of advanced human body models to develop applicable assessment criteria for the revised impactors is intended to cope with the paucity of actual biomechanical data focusing on elderly pedestrians. In order to achieve optimized results in the future, the improved test methods need to be implemented within an integrated approach, combining active with passive safety measures. In order to address the developments in road accidents and injury patterns of vulnerable road users, established test and assessment procedures need to be continuously verified and, where needed, to be revised. The demographic change as well as changes in the vehicle fleet, leading to a variation of accident scenarios, injury frequencies and injury patterns of vulnerable road users are addressed by the work provided by the SENIORS project, introducing updated impactors for pedestrian test and assessment procedures.
A legform impactor with biofidelic characteristics (FlexPLI) which is being developed by the Japanese Automobile Research Institute (JARI) is being considered as a test tool for legislation within a proposed Global Technical Regulation on pedestrian protection (UNECE, 2006) and therefore being evaluated by the Technical Evaluation Group (TEG) of GRSP. In previous built levels it already showed good test results on real cars as well as under idealised test conditions but also revealed further need for improvement. A research study at the Federal Highway Research Institute (BASt) deals with the question on how leg injury risks of modern car fronts can be revealed, reflected and assessed by the FlexPLI and how the impactor can be used and implemented as a legislative instrument for the type approval of cars according to current and future legislations on pedestrian protection. The latest impactor built level (GTα ) is being evaluated by a general review and assessment of the certification procedure, the knee joint biofidelity and the currently proposed injury criteria. Furthermore, the usability, robustness and durability as a test tool for legislation is examined and an assessment of leg injuries is made by a series of tests with the FlexPLI on real cars with modern car front shapes as well as under idealised test conditions. Finally, a comparison is made between the FlexPLI and the current european legislation tool, the legform impactor according to EEVC WG 17.
Supported by field accident data and monitoring results of European Regulation (EC) No. 78/2009, recent plans of the European Commission regarding a way forward to improve passive safety of vulnerable road users include, amongst other things, an extension of the head test area. The inclusion of passive cyclist safety is also being considered by Euro NCAP. Although passenger car to cyclist collisions are often severe and have a significant share within the accident statistics, cyclists are neither considered sufficiently in the legislative nor in the consumer ratings tests. Therefore, a test procedure to assess the protection potential of vehicle fronts in a collision with cyclists has been developed within a current research project. For this purpose, the existing pedestrian head impact test procedures were modified in order to include boundary conditions relevant for cyclists as the second big group of vulnerable road users. Based on an in-depth analysis of passenger car to cyclist accidents in Germany the three most representative accident constellations have been initially defined. The development of the test procedure itself was based on corresponding simulations with representative vehicle and bicycle models. In addition to different cyclist heights, reaching from a 6-year-old child to a 95%-male, also four pedal positions were considered. By reconstruction of a real accident the defined simulation parameters could be validated in advance. The conducted accident kinematics analysis shows for a large portion of the constellations an increased head impact area, which can reach beyond the roof leading edge, as well as high average values for head impact velocity and angle. Based on the simulation data obtained for the different vehicle models, cyclist-specific test parameters for impactor tests have been derived, which have been further examined in the course of head and leg impact tests. In order to study the cyclist accident kinematics under real test conditions, different full scale tests with a Polar-II dummy positioned on a bicycle have been conducted. Overall, the tests showed a good correlation with the simulations and support the defined boundary test conditions. Typical accident scenarios and simulations reveal higher head impact locations, angles and velocities. An extended head impact area with modified test parameters will contribute to an improved protection of vulnerable road users including cyclists. However, due to significantly differing impact kinematics and postures between the lower extremities of pedestrians and cyclists, these injuries cannot be addressed by the means of current test tools such as the flexible pedestrian legform impactor FlexPLI. Based on the findings obtained within the project as well as the existing pedestrian protection requirements a cyclist protection test procedure for use in legislation and consumer test programmes has been developed, whose requirements have been transferred into a corresponding test specification. This specification provides common head test boundary conditions for pedestrians and cyclists, whereby the existing requirements are modified and two parallel test procedures are avoided.
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.
A flexible pedestrian legform impactor (FlexPLI) with biofidelic characteristics is aimed to be implemented within global legislation on pedestrian protection. Therefore, it is being evaluated by a technical evaluation group (Flex-TEG) of GRSP with respect to its biofidelity, robustness, durability, usability and protection level (Zander, 2008). Previous studies at the Federal Highway Research Institute (BASt) and other laboratories already showed good progress concerning the general development, but also the need for further improvement and further research in various areas. An overview is provided of the different levels of development and all kinds of evaluation activities of the Flex-TEG, starting with the Polar II full scale pedestrian dummy as its origin and ending up with the latest legform impactor built level GTR that is expected to be finalized by the end of the year 2009. Using the latest built levels as a basis, gaps are revealed that should be closed by future developments, like the usage of an upper body mass (UBM), the validation of the femur loads, injury risk functions for the cruciate knee ligaments and an appropriate certification method. A recent study on an additional upper body mass being applied for the first time to the Flex-GT is used as means of validation of recently proposed modified impact conditions. Therefore, two test series on a modern vehicle front using an impactor with and without upper body mass are compared. A test series with the Flex-GTR will be used to study both the comparability of the impact behavior of the GT and GTR built level as well as the consistency of test results. Recommendations for implementation within legislation on pedestrian protection are made.
A flexible pedestrian legform impactor (FlexPLI) has been evaluated by a Technical Evaluation Group (Flex-TEG) of the Working Party on Passive Safety (GRSP) of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe (UN-ECE). It will be implemented within phase 2 of the global technical regulation (GTR 9) as well as within a new ECE regulation on pedestrian safety as a test tool for the assessment of lower extremity injuries in lateral vehicle-to-pedestrian accidents (UN-ECE 2010-1, 2010-2 and 2010-3). Due to its biofidelic properties in the knee and tibia section, the FlexPLI is found to having an improved knee and tibia injury assessment ability when being compared to the current legislative test tool, the lower legform impactor developed by the Pedestrian Safety Working Group of the European Enhanced Vehicle-safety Committee (EEVC WG 17). However, due to a lack of biofidelity in terms of kinematics and loadings in the femur part of the FlexPLI, an appropriate assessment of femur injuries is still outstanding. The study described in this paper is aimed to close this gap. Impactor tests with the FlexPLI at different impact heights on three vehicle frontends with Sedan, SUV and FFV shape are performed and compared to tests with a modified FlexPLI with upper body mass. Full scale validation tests using a modified crash test dummy with attached FlexPLI that are carried out for the first time prove the more humanlike responses of the femur section with applied upper body mass. Apart from that they also show that the impact conditions described in the current technical provisions for tests with the FlexPLI don"t necessarily compensate the missing torso mass in terms of knee and tibia loadings either. Therefore it can be concluded that an applied upper body mass will contribute to a more biofidelic overall behavior of the legform and subsequently an improved injury assessment ability of all lower extremity injuries addressed by the FlexPLI. Nevertheless, the validity of the original as well as the modified legform for tests against vehicles with extraordinary high bumpers as well as flat front vehicles still needs to be evaluated in detail. A first clue is given by the application of an additional accelerometer to the legform.
Recent accident statistics from the German national database state bicyclists being the second endangered group of vulnerable road users besides pedestrians. With 399 fatalities, more than 14.000 seriously injured and more than 61.000 slightly injured persons on german roads in the year 2011, the group of bicyclists is ranked second of all road user groups (Statistisches Bundesamt, 2012). While the overall bicycle helmet usage frequency in Germany is very low, evidence is given that its usage leads to a significant reduction of severe head injuries. After an estimation of the benefit of bicycle helmet usage as well as an appropriate test procedure for bicyclists, this paper describes two different approaches for the improvement of bicyclist safety. While the first one is focusing on the assessment of the vehicle based protection potential for bicyclists, the second one is concentrating on the safety assessment of bicycle helmets. Within the first part of the study the possible revision of the existing pedestrian testing protocols is being examined, using in depth accident data, full scale simulation and hardware testing. Within the second part of the study, the results of tests according to supplemental test procedures for the safety assessment of bicycle helmets developed by the German Federal Highway Research Institute (BASt) are presented. An additional full scale test performed at reduced impact speed proves that measures of active vehicle safety as e.g. braking before the collision event do not necessarily always lead to a reduction of injury severity.
Beijing, mit 11,4 Millionen Einwohnern, 563.690 Kraftfahrzeugen einschließlich der motorisierten Zweiräder aller Art, 7,4 Millionen Fahrrädern, 5.213 Bussen und einer U-Bahn-Linie, ist nicht nur eine alte, traditionsreiche Kaiserstadt im Herzen Chinas, sondern auch eine aufstrebende, geschäftige Millionenstadt Asiens, die von Tag zu Tag, dem wirtschaftlichen Aufschwung folgend, sich städtebaulich und verkehrlich wandelt. Trotz vielfältiger Umweltprobleme wird der Zuwachs an Mobilität positiv bewertet; dem tragen die Verantwortlichen Rechnung durch Ausbau der Infrastruktur sowohl des ÖPNV als auch des Individualverkehrs. Der vorliegende Artikel beschäftigt sich mit den Entwicklungen des Stadtverkehrs und vermittelt eine detaillierte Analyse des Unfallgeschehens; heute stirbt in Beijing täglich durchschnittlich ein Mensch im Straßenverkehr.
The first version of German Highway Capacity Manual was published in 2001. Now, a new version is published in 2015 (HBS 2015). For the new German Highway Capacity Manual, most major chapters are revised and some of them are totally rewritten. The chapter for merge, diverge, and small weaving segments is rewritten in accordance with forthcoming developments in the past 10 years. In this paper, an overview of the chapter in the new German Highway Capacity Manual is presented. Procedures dealing with performance analyses and level of service (LOS) of those segments are introduced both for freeways and rural highways. Differences between the former version and the new version of the chapter in the German Highway Capacity Manual are indicated and discussed. In most of the existing highway capacity manuals, LOS of merge, diverge, and small weaving segments is traditionally defined by speed, volume, or density in critical areas. In that traditional concept several capacity values of different critical areas (merge, diverge, and weaving) as well as upstream and downstream basic segments within the influence areas are evaluated separately. In the new HBS 2015, a new model which considers the total merge, diverge, and weaving segment as an entire object is incorporated. A combined volume-to-capacity ratio (freeways) or a combined density (rural highways) is used for defining the LOS of the total segment. The parameters of the new procedure are functions of the number of lanes of the major road, the number of lanes in the on-ramp or off-ramp, and the predefined geometric design of those segments. The coefficients are calibrated with field data or defined by experts" experiences within a matrix of coefficients. With those procedures, the traffic quality (LOS) can be obtained directly as a function of the volumes or densities on the major road and on the on-ramp or off-ramp respectively. The new procedure has the following advantages: a) a uniform function for all types of merge, diverge, and small weaving segments, b) traffic quality assessment for all critical areas under investigation in one step, and c) the procedure can easily be calibrated. For applications in practice, a set of graphs is provided.
Im ersten Teil des Forschungsvorhabens wurden von der BASt in Zusammenarbeit mit den Straßenbauverwaltungen der Bundesländer vergleichende Untersuchungen an verschiedenen Bauarten von Brückenbelägen auf insgesamt 99 Brücken vorgenommen. Aufgrund der Untersuchungsergebnisse und des damaligen Erfahrungshintergrundes wurden 1987 die Bauarten mit Dampfdruckentspannungsschicht wegen der Gefahr der Unterläufigkeit vom Einsatz im Bereich der Bundesverkehrswege ausgeschlossen. Stattdessen werden seither die Bauarten mit einer flächig verklebten Dichtungsschicht gemäß den "Zusätzliche Technische Vertragsbedingungen und Richtlinien für das Herstellen von Brückenbelägen auf Beton" (ZTV-BEL-B) Teile 1 bis 3 verwendet. Die Betonoberfläche der Fahrbahntafel muss bei allen Bauarten mit Reaktionsharz auf Epoxidbasis behandelt werden. Dieser Bericht enthält die Erfahrungen, die seit Einführung der ZTV-BEL-B bei Baustellenbegehungen, bei Stellungnahmen zu Schadensfällen, bei der Mitarbeit in Gremien für die Regelwerkserstellung, bei der Auswertung der Fremdüberwachungsergebnisse der Baustoffe und bei der Führung der "Zusammenstellung der geprüften Stoffe und Stoffsysteme nach ZTV-BEL-B" gewonnen wurden. Es werden die Entwicklungen der Bauarten und die bekannt gewordenen Fehlerquellen geschildert. Die dabei getroffene Auswahl der Schadensfälle erhebt keinen Anspruch auf Repräsentanz. Die Erfahrung hat gezeigt, dass die Behandlung der Betonoberflächen mit einem Reaktionsharz auf Epoxid-Basis als Grundierung, Versiegelung oder Kratzspachtelung auf einer abtragend vorbereiten Betonoberfläche die Voraussetzung für einen dauerhaften Verbund der nachfolgenden Dichtungsschicht schafft. Weitaus am meisten wird die Bauart nach ZTV-BEL-B Teil 1 mit einer Dichtungsschicht aus einer Bitumenschweißbahn und einer Schutzschicht aus Gussasphalt eingesetzt. Die Bauart nach den ZTV-BEL-B Teil 2 mit einer Dichtungsschicht aus zwei Lagen Bitumen-Bahnen und Schutz- und Deckschicht aus Walzasphalt (Splittmastixasphalt oder Asphaltbeton) wird dort eingesetzt, wo Walzasphalt bevorzugt wird oder Gussasphalt nicht verfügbar ist. Auch bei stärkerer Neigung der Fahrbahn (über ca. 7 Prozent) kann nur Walzasphalt eingebaut werden. Die Bauart nach ZTV-BEL-B Teil 3 mit einer Dichtungsschicht aus flüssig appliziertem Reaktionsharz, meist Polyurethan, und einer Schutzschicht aus Gussasphalt ist wegen des höheren Preises eher für Sonderfälle geeignet, wie Flächen mit komplizierter Geometrie und Aufkantungen, Anschlüsse an vorhandenen Kappen und so weiter. Die bisherigen Erfahrungen bestätigen, dass mit den ZTV-BEL-B Teile 1 bis 3 die Grundlage für den Bau hochwertiger Dichtungsschichten geschaffen wurde. Die in diesem Bericht geschilderten Schäden sind Einzelfälle. Die große Mehrzahl der Brückenbeläge ist ohne Schäden und dichtet den Beton der Brückentafeln zuverlässig ab. Bei Einhaltung der in den ZTV-BEL-B vorgegebenen Anforderungen an die Stoffe und die Bauausführung ist eine hohe Ausführungssicherheit gegeben. Schäden entstanden meistens durch Nichtbeachtung dieser Vorgaben bei der Ausführung, und zwar aus Gründen der Kosteneinsparung oder wegen fehlender Fachkenntnis. Infolge der dauerhaften flächigen Verklebung der Dichtungsschichten nach den ZTV-BEL-B hat die Abdichtung (Dichtungsschicht und Schutzschicht) eine wesentlich längere Lebensdauer als bei den früheren Belägen mit Trennschicht. Anstatt wie früher den gesamten Belag erneuern zu müssen, genügt bei standfester Schutzschicht nun die turnusmäßige Instandsetzung der Deckschicht. Die Abdichtung kann somit über viele Jahrzehnte auf der Brückentafel verbleiben. Wichtige Weiterentwicklungen waren im Beobachtungszeitraum die Fortschreibung der Regelwerke, insbesondere der Technischen Lieferbedingungen und Prüfvorschriften sowie die in die Praxis umgesetzten Forschungsergebnisse auf den Gebieten der Behandlung mit Reaktionsharz auf dauerhaft feuchtem Beton (zum Beispiel Trog- und Tunnelsohlen) sowie auf jungem Beton zur Verringerung der Bauzeit und der Optimierung des Kratzspachtels. Weiterentwicklungen erscheinen noch auf dem Gebiet der Asphalte für die Schutz- und Deckschichten erforderlich, um die Standfestigkeit zur Aufnahme der wachsenden Verkehrsbelastung zu verbessern.
Bei kurzen Brücken bis circa 20 Meter dehnungswirksamer Länge werden am Übergang zur freien Strecke noch keine stählernen Fahrbahnübergänge zum Ausgleich von Längenänderungen eingesetzt. Stattdessen wurde in der Regel eine breitere Vergussfuge angeordnet, welche die geringen zu erwartenden Verschiebungen aufnehmen soll. Häufig treten jedoch im Bereich der Fuge Risse auf, die zu Undichtigkeiten und Senkungen im Bereich der Fahrbahn führen und auch Schäden am Bauwerk hinterlassen können. Als Verbesserung wird zunehmend im Bereich des Brückenendes ein circa 50 Zentimeter breiter viskoelastischer Asphalt-Dehnkörper eingebaut, der den Fugenspalt überbrückt und in der Lage ist, die auftretenden Verschiebungen aufzunehmen. Die prinzipielle konstruktive Ausbildung wird zeichnerisch dargestellt. Die Auswertung der Umfrage ergab, dass die bisher eingebauten Asphalt-Übergänge zwar in nicht unerheblichem Maß Schäden aufweisen, die aber zum großen Teil die Funktionsfähigkeit nicht einschränken. Es ist zu erwarten, dass durch die Einführung neuer zusätzlicher technischer Vertragsbedingungen (ZTV-BEL-FÜ) die Anzahl der Schäden auf ein Minimum reduziert werden wird.
Im Jahre 2002 wurden 66 Fahrbahnübergänge aus Asphalt auf 31 Brückenbauwerken, verteilt auf Landesstraßen, Bundesstraßen und Autobahnen, nach ihrem an der Belagsoberfläche sichtbaren Zustand bewertet. Die Übergänge waren zwischen sechs und acht Jahren alt und somit noch vor Einführung des hierfür gültigen Regelwerkes (ZTV-BEL-FÜ), Ausgabe 1998) eingebaut worden. Es zeigte sich bei den Landes- und Bundesstraßen ein zufriedenstellendes Ergebnis mit nur geringen Quoten an gravierenden Mängeln (jeweils ca. 8 % pro Straßenklasse). Dagegen waren bei den insgesamt 14 Übergängen in Autobahnen mit zunehmender Schwerverkehrsbelastung gravierende Mängel festzustellen. Acht Übergänge (57 %) waren in den vom Schwerverkehr benutzten Fahrstreifen entweder repariert oder gänzlich durch Deckenbau-Asphalt ersetzt worden. Die Schwerverkehrsstärken lagen bei den geschädigten Übergängen zwischen 4.400 bis 11.300 Kfz/24 h. Im Jahr 2004 wurde die Zustandserfassung an 27 Fahrbahnübergängen aus Asphalt auf 9 Brücken ausschließlich in Autobahnen fortgesetzt. Um Objekte bewerten zu können, die sowohl nach Einführung der ZTV-BEL-FÜ als auch nach Eröffnung der "Zusammenstellung der geprüften Fahrbahnübergänge aus Asphalt" eingebaut worden waren, musste auf relativ junge Übergänge mit einem Alter von 2 bis 3 Jahren zurückgegriffen werden. Als Ergebnis zeigte sich ein wesentlich günstigeres Bild als bei der Erfassung 2002, dennoch hatten 18 der Übergänge gravierende Mängel, sodass sie in den Schwerverkehrsbereichen bereits repariert werden mussten. Die Schwerverkehrsstärken auf den ausgewählten Brücken waren mit 4.200 bis 9.000 Kfz/24 h für Autobahnen nur durchschnittlich hoch. Auf stark befahrenen Autobahnen können Schwerverkehrsstärken von 15.000 Kfz/24 h und mehr auftreten. Da die Baustoffe nach Einführung der ZTV-BEL-FÜ durch die Gütesicherung eine gleichmäßige Qualität aufweisen müssten, wird vermutet, dass die in ihrer Häufigkeit nicht tolerierbaren Mängel in den Autobahnen auf Unzulänglichkeiten der Bauausführung zurückzuführen sind. Es wird empfohlen, den Einbau durch eine fachkundige Bauaufsicht überwachen zu lassen.
An 13 Trogbauwerken im Grundwasser wurden Fahrbahnbeläge und der darunter liegende Beton der Sohlen untersucht, um festzustellen, welche bauphysikalischen Besonderheiten in bezug auf die Fahrbahnbeläge gegenüber Brückenbauwerken bestehen. Es sollten Grundlagen dafür geschaffen werden, die in den "Zusätzlichen Technischen Vorschriften und Richtlinien für die Herstellung von Brückenbelägen auf Beton, Ausgabe 1987 (ZTV-Bel-B)" angesprochenen Sondermaßnahmen für Beläge auf Trog- und Tunnelsohlen zu konkretisieren. Neun Bauwerke hatten eine Außenabdichtung ("schwarze Wannen"), bei den anderen vier wurde die Abdichtung gegen das Grundwasser durch Ausführung der Sohlen und Wände aus wasserundurchlässigem Beton ("weiße Wannen") erreicht. Die Fahrbahnbeläge hatten folgende Aufbauten: Beläge nach der ZTV-BEL-B mit flächiger Verklebung zum Beton (4 Bauwerke), andere Beläge mit flächiger Verklebung (2), Beläge mit Abdichtung auf Trennschicht (3), Belagsaufbauten mit vollständigem oder teilweisem Straßenaufbau mit Dichtungsschicht (3) und ohne Dichtungsschicht (1) auf der Trogsohle. Das Alter der Bauwerke lag zwischen zwei und 29 Jahren. Aus den Fahrbahnbelägen (alle in Asphaltbauweise) wurden Ausbaustücke und teilweise auch Bohrkerne entnommen; der Asphalt und der Sohlenbeton wurden visuell bewertet. Aus dem Sohlenbeton wurden Proben zur Bestimmung der Chlorid- und Feuchtegehalte entnommen. Weitere Untersuchungen waren die Ermittlung der Abreißfestigkeit von Flüssigkunststoff-Dichtungsschichten von der Unterlage und Potentialmessungen auf einer Trogsohle und an einer Trogwand. Unter anderem konnten Ergebnisse zur (hohen) Betonfeuchte generell und zur Chloridaufnahme des oberflächennahen Sohlenbetons bei fehlender Fahrbahnabdichtung gefunden werden. Die grundsätzliche Möglichkeit, verklebte Belgsbauarten nach den ZTV-BEL-B auch auf den Trogsohlen mit ihren hohen Feuchtegehalten einzusetzen, konnte an einem ausgeführten Beispiel mit einem Alter von fünf Jahren belegt werden. Weiterhin wurden Erfahrungswerte darüber gewonnen, wann Fugen im Belag über Blockfugen in der Trogsohle ausgebildet werden müssen.
The Joint Transport Research Centre of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and the International Transport Forum recently conducted a benchmarking study of the safety and productivity of typical highway transport trucks from various countries. This paper focuses on vehicle productivity and efficiency in regard to the movement of freight. Forty vehicles from 10 countries were examined. The vehicles were designed for longer-haul applications and were classified in three separate categories: workhorse vehicles, which are the most common and can travel on most roads; high-capacity vehicles, which may be restricted to a certain class of road; and very high-capacity vehicles, which may be restricted to specific highways or routes. The metrics used in the analysis include maximum cargo mass and volume capacity, optimum cargo density, fuel consumption, and carbon dioxide output as a function of the freight task. The study found that size and weight regulations have a significant effect on the productivity and efficiency of heavy vehicles, including fuel consumption and vehicle emissions per unit of cargo transported. Significant variations were found among the vehicles from participating countries as well as within vehicle classes. It was also apparent that, in general, higher-productivity vehicles are correlated more strongly with increased cargo volume than with increased cargo mass and that larger trucks are better suited to lower-density freight than are workhorse vehicles. The study also found that it is important to consider the freight task when evaluating vehicle fuel consumption and emissions.
Ziel der Studie ist die Verkehrsbeteiligung der 3- bis 17-jährigen und die Darstellung eventueller Veränderungen im Straßenverkehrsverhalten der angesprochenen Personengruppe für den Erhebungszeitraum 1984/85 im Vergleich zum Erhebungszeitraum 1975/76. Der Darstellung der Ergebnisse (Entwicklung der Unfälle von Kindern und Jugendlichen seit 1975; generelle Verkehrsbeteiligung von Kindern und Jugendlichen; aktuelle Verkehrsbeteiligung der Kinder und Jugendlichen) folgen Vorschläge zur Ergreifung von Maßnahmen, wobei zwischen forschungsstrategischen Maßnahmen und sozial-technologischen Maßnahmen unterschieden wird.
Within this paper different European accident data sources were used to investigate the causations and backgrounds of road traffic accidents with pedestrians. Analyses of high level national data and in-depth accident data from Germany and Great Britain was used to confirm and refine preliminary accident scenarios identified from other sources using a literature review. General observations made included that a high proportion of killed or seriously injured pedestrian casualties impacted by cars were in "dark" light conditions. Seven accident scenarios were identified (each divided into "daylight" and "dark" light conditions) which included the majority of the car front-to-pedestrian crash configurations. Test scenarios were developed using the identified accident scenarios and relevant parameters. Hypothetical parameters were derived to describe the performance of pedestrian pre-crash systems based on the assumption that these systems are designed to avoid false positives as a very high priority, i.e. at virtually all costs. As result, three "Base Test Scenarios" were selected to be developed in detail in the AsPeCSS project. However, further Enhanced Test Scenarios may be needed to address environmental factors such as darkness if it is determined that system performance is sensitive to these factors. Finally, weighting factors for the accident scenarios for Europe (EU-27) were developed by averaging and extrapolation of the available data. This paper represents interim results of Work Package 1 within the AsPeCSS project.
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.
A reduction of around 48% of all road fatalities was achieved in Europe in the past years including a reduced number of fatalities with an older age. However, among all road fatalities, the proportion of elderly is steadily increasing. In an ageing society, the European (Horizon2020) project SENIORS aims to improve the safe mobility of older road users, who have different transportation habits compared to other age groups. To increase their level of safe mobility by determining appropriate requirements for vehicle safety systems, the characteristics of current road traffic collisions involving the elderly and the injuries that they sustain need to be understood in detail. Hereby, the paper focuses on their traffic participation as pedestrian, cyclist or passenger car occupant. Following a literature review, several national and international crash databases and hospital statistics have been analysed to determine the body regions most frequently and severely injured, specific injuries sustained and types of crashes involved, always comparing older road users (65 years and more) with mid-aged road users (25-64 years). The most important crash scenarios were highlighted. The data sources included European statistics from CARE, data on national level from Germany, Sweden, Italy, United Kingdom and Spain as well as in-depth crash information from GIDAS (Germany), RAIDS (UK), CIREN and NASS-CDS (US). In addition, familiar hospital data from Germany (TraumaRegister DGU-®), Italy (Italian Register of Acute Traumas) and UK hospital statistics (TARN) were included in the study to gain further insight into specific injury patterns. Comprehensive data analyses were performed showing injury patterns of older road users in crashes. When comparing with mid-aged road users, all databases showed that the thorax body region is of particularly high importance for the older car occupant with injury severities of AIS 2 or AIS 3+, whereas the body regions lower extremities, head and thorax need to be considered for the older pedestrians and cyclists. Besides these comparisons, the most frequent and severe top 5 injuries were highlighted per road user group. Further, the most important crash configurations were identified and injury risk functions are provided per age group and road user group. Although several databases have been analysed, the picture on the road safety situation of older road users in Europe was not complete, as only Western European data was available. The linkage between crash data and hospital data could only be made on a general level as their inclusion criteria were quite different.