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Das Bundesministerium für Verkehr hat die Bundesanstalt für Straßenwesen damit beauftragt, die internationale Entwicklung zum Thema "Fahrsimulatoren" zu beobachten und über die Ergebnisse zu berichten. Hierzu ist eine Umfrage bei Herstellern von Fahrsimulatoren im In- und Ausland durchgeführt worden. Von Interesse war dabei ausschließlich die Gruppe der Trainingssimulatoren. Dabei konnte auf eine vorangehende Befragung aus dem Jahre 1994 aufgebaut werden. Der seinerzeit verwendete Fragebogen zu technischen Merkmalen von Fahrsimulatoren wurde in einigen Aspekten modifiziert. Darüber hinaus wurde ein Fragebogen über didaktische Merkmale von Fahrsimulatoren konzipiert und der Umfrage beigefügt. Beide Fragebögen wurden an 43 Firmen und Institutionen verschickt; von den erhaltenen 15 Rückantworten waren sieben nicht verwertbar, sei es weil die Fragebögen nur unzureichend ausgefüllt waren, sei es weil es sich bei den beschriebenen Fahrsimulatoren nicht um Trainingssimulatoren handelt. Ein Hersteller hat zwei Fahrsimulatoren beschrieben, so dass in den acht verwertbaren Rückantworten neun Simulatoren nach technischen Merkmalen beschrieben worden sind. Die didaktischen Konzeptionen wurden von sieben Herstellern dargestellt. Die rund 150 abgefragten technischen Merkmale werden in dem Bericht zunächst für jeden Fahrsimulator separat mitgeteilt. Um Fahrsimulatoren nach diesen Merkmalen besser untereinander vergleichen zu können, werden die Daten darüber hinaus nach Merkmalen geordnet dargestellt. Die Überlegungen zur didaktischen Konzeption sind in dem Bericht unverändert so abgedruckt, wie sie von den Herstellern übersandt worden sind. Im Hinblick auf die technischen Merkmale haben sich im Vergleich zur ersten Befragung keine entscheidenden Veränderungen ergeben. Bemerkenswert ist allerdings, dass die meisten Hersteller von Fahrsimulatoren zu Ausbildungszwecken im Lkw-Bereich ihren Schwerpunkt setzen. Mit der Zusammenstellung der didaktischen Konzeptionen wird Neuland betreten. Die Ergebnisse zeigen große Unterschiede auf diesem Gebiet. Es darf erwartet werden, dass in Zukunft hier noch elaboriertere Konzeptionen vorgelegt werden.
Die vorliegende Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit den Auswirkungen alternativer Antriebskonzepte auf die Fahrdynamik von Pkw. Es werden einleitend die konventionellen und alternativen Antriebskonzepte sowie Unterschiede in Hinblick auf die Fahrdynamik herausgearbeitet. Die Ergebnisse einer Recherche zur Fahrwerksentwicklung von Hybrid- und Elektrofahrzeugen zeigen keine klaren Trends zu neuartigen oder geänderten Fahrwerkskonzepten, sodass auf eine getrennte Betrachtung von Fahrwerken für Fahrzeuge mit konventionellen und alternativen Antrieben verzichtet werden kann. Die erarbeiteten Unterschiede zwischen konventionellen und alternativen Antrieben zeigen, dass die Möglichkeit der Rekuperation von Hybrid- und E-Fahrzeugen insbesondere bei kombinierten Längs- und Querkräften zu deutlichen Auswirkungen auf die Fahrdynamik führen kann. Im nächsten Schritt werden daher Fahrmanöver zusammengestellt und in Bezug auf die Relevanz für die Rekuperation analysiert. Dabei erweist sich das nach DIN ISO 7975 genormte Fahrmanöver "Bremsen im Kreis" als zielführend, die Auswirkungen der Rekuperation auf die Fahrdynamik zu analysieren. Außerdem wird das Fahrzeugverhalten bei einer Geradeausbremsung und folgender Lenkanregung sowie bei einer Bremsung auf μ-Split untersucht, da auch hier Wechselwirkungen von Antrieb und Fahrwerk auftreten. Zur Beurteilung der Ergebnisse wird neben der Fahrstabilität auch die Wahrnehmbarkeit eines geänderten Fahrverhaltens betrachtet. Anhand einer Literaturrecherche wurde für die Giergeschwindigkeit ein Schwellwert von 3-°/s für die Wahrnehmbarkeit gefunden. Die Ergebnisse einer Simulationsstudie mit zwei Fahrzeugkonzepten (Front-/Heckantrieb) in den drei genannten Fahrmanövern zeigen, dass die Rekuperation in weiten Bereichen der Längsverzögerungen sinnvoll eingesetzt werden kann. Bei der Bremsung in der Kurve führt die Rekuperation an der Vorderachse zu einer deutlichen Reduzierung störender Fahrzeugreaktionen und kann auch bei höheren Querbeschleunigungen verwendet werden. Bei der Rekuperation an der Hinterachse kann es insbesondere auf Niedrigreibwerten bei Bremsungen in der Kurve zu kritischen Fahrzuständen kommen. Durch die Begrenzung des Rekuperationsmomentes bei großen Schlupfwerten kann die Stabilität des Fahrzeugs jedoch sichergestellt werden. Auch die Ergebnisse der Simulationen der anderen Fahrmanöver zeigen, dass bei geringen Schlupfwerten keine wahrnehmbaren fahrdynamischen Unterschiede festzustellen sind.
The development of tyre- and truck-manufacturers leads to the direction to introduce wide base single tyres (size 495/45R22,5) instead of twin tyres on the driving axle of trucks, tractors and busses. To study the driving behaviour and safety of various trucks and units with different tyre combinations and loading conditions was the aim of the study. A computer-aided simulation was used for this investigation. Drive tests with a 40 t unit with prototype single tyres on the drive axle were carried out to verify the simulation. Alterations in driving behaviour and driving safety are mainly dependent on the tyre cornering stiffness. The prototype wide single tyres had a higher lateral stiffness which leads to a higher degree of under-steering (safer driving behaviour). The altered spring base on the drive axle had no influence on the side- tilt stability of vehicle combinations but the solo truck profited from the higher rear axle roll stiffness (less danger for roll-over accidents). As far as the driving safety is concerned nothing speaks against wide base tyres on the drive axle. The simulation of a tyre defect in a bend (assuming 40% of the max. transferable side force for the flat tyre) showed no increased danger using wide single tyres. Later driving tests showed however the need of tyre run flat possibilities to avoid jack-knifing of road trains. Also tyre pressure monitoring systems and electronic stability programs for the trucks are advised.
The Swedish National Road Administration (SNRA), the Japanese Automobile Research Institute (JARI) and the Federal Highway Research Institute (BASt) are co-operating in the International Harmonized Research Activities on Intelligent Transportation Systems (IHRA-ITS). Under this umbrella a joint study was conducted. The overall objective of this study was to contribute to the definition and validation of a "battery of tools" which enables a prediction and an assessment of changes in driver workload due to the use of in-vehicle information systems (IVIS) while driving. In this sense \"validation\" means to produce empirical evidence from which it can be concluded that these methods reliably discriminate between IVIS which differ in terms of relevant features of the HMI-design. Additionally these methods should also be sensitive to the task demands imposed on the driver by the traffic situation and their interactions with HMI-design. To achieve these goals experimental validation studies (on-road and in the simulator) were performed in Sweden, Germany and Japan. As a common element these studies focused on the secondary task methodology as an approach to the study of driver workload. In a joint German-Swedish on-road study the Peripheral Detection Task (PDT) was assessed with respect to its sensitivity to the complexity of traffic situations and effects of different types of navigation systems. Results show that the PDT performance of both the German and the Swedish subjects reflects the task demands of the traffic situations better than those of the IVIS. However, alternative explanations are possible which will be examined by further analyses. Results of this study are supplemented by the Japanese study where informational demands induced by various traffic situations were analysed by using a simple arithmetic task as a secondary task. Results of this study show that relatively large task demands can be expected even from simple traffic situations.
At the 2005 ESV conference, the International Harmonisation of Research Activities (IHRA) side impact working group proposed a 4 part draft test procedure, to form the basis of harmonisation of regulation world-wide and to help advances in car occupant protection. This paper presents the work performed by a European Commission 6th framework project, called APROSYS, an further development and evaluation of the proposed procedure from a European perspective. The 4 parts of the proposed procedure are: - A Mobile Deformable Barrier test; - An oblique Pole side impact test; - Interior headform tests; - Side Out of Position (OOP) tests. Full scale test and modelling work to develop the Advanced European Mobile Deformable Barrier (AE-MDB) further is described, resulting in a recommendation to revise the barrier face to include a bumper beam element. An evaluation of oblique and perpendicular pole tests was made from tests and numerical simulations using ES-2 and WorldSID 50th percentile dummies. It was concluded that an oblique pole test is feasible but that a perpendicular test would be preferable for Europe. The interior headform test protocol was evaluated to assess its repeatability and reproducibility and to solve issues such as the head impact angle and limitation zones. Recommendations for updates to the test protocol are made. Out-of-position (OOP) tests applicable for the European situation were performed, which included additional tests with Child Restraint Systems (CRS) which use is mandatory in Europe. It was concluded that the proposed IHRA OOP tests do cover the worst case situations, but the current test protocol is not ready for regulatory use.
Since integrated safety systems combine active and passive safety elements in one safety system, it is necessary to define new procedures to evaluate vehicle safety from the overall system point of view. The main goal of the ASSESS project is to develop harmonized and standardized assessment procedures for collision mitigation and avoidance systems. Methods and Data Sources: In ASSESS, procedures are developed for: driver behaviour evaluation, pre-crash system performance evaluation, crash performance evaluation, socio-economic assessment. This paper will concentrate on the activities related to the crash evaluation. The objective is to perform simulations, sled tests and crash tests in order tounderstand the influence of the activation of the pre-crash systems on the occupants" injuries during the crash phase. When a traffic accident is unavoidable, pre-crash systems work on various safety devices in order to improve the vehicle occupants" protection. Braking assistance and adaptive restraint systems are the main pre-crash systems whose effect on the occupants" protection will be described in this paper. Results: The results will be a description of the effect of the activation of the pre-crash systems on the crash phase. Additionally, a set of recommendations for future methodology developments will be delivered. Furthermore, a first approach to the study of the effect of the pre-crash systems activation on the occupants" protection when the impact is unavoidable will be presented. This effect will be quantified using the biomechanical values obtained from the simulation and testing activities and their related injury risks. Simulation and testing activities will consider the following scenarios: - No activation of any pre-crash system, - Activation of one or a combination of several pre-crash systems. In this way, differences in the results obtained from different scenarios will show the effect of each pre-crash system separately during the crash phase. Discussion and Limitations: The set of activities developed in this research project is limited by the fact that with the given resources only a limited number of vehicle models could be investigated. In addition, there are also limitations related to the injury risk curves and the passive safety tools currently on the market. Conclusion and Relevance to session submitted: The paper will present a complete analysis of the effect of pre-crash systems during the crash phase when the impact is unavoidable. Details, limitations and first application experience based on a few examples will be discussed. Currently, there is not any regulation, assessment program, or other similar official procedure able to assess pre-crash systems during the crash phase. This project comprises phases of traffic accidents which have been historically analysed separately, and aims to evaluate them taking into account their interrelationship. ASSESS is one of the first European projects which deals in depth with the concept of integrated safety, defining methodologies to analyse vehicle safety from a global point of view.
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.
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.
For a number of EU regulatory acts Virtual Testing (VT) is already allowed for type approval (see Commission Regulation No. 371/2010 of 16 April 2010 amending the Framework Directive 2007/46/EC). However, only a very general procedure on how to apply VT for type approval is provided. Technical details for specific regulatory acts are not given yet. The main objective of the European project IMVITER (IMplementation of VIrtual TEsting in Safety Regulations) was to promote the implementation of VT in safety regulations. When proposing VT procedures the new regulation was taken into account, in particular, addressing open issues. Special attention was paid to pedestrian protection as pilot cases. A key aspect for VT implementation is to demonstrate that the employed simulation models are reliable. This paper describes how the Verification and Validation (V&V) method defined by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers was adapted for pedestrian protection VT based assessment. or the certification of headform impactors an extensive study was performed at two laboratories to assess the variability in calibration tests and equivalent results from a set of simulation models. Based on these results a methodology is defined for certification of headform impactor simulation models. A similar study was also performed with one vehicle in the type approval test setup. Its bonnet was highly instrumented and subjected to 45 impacts in five different positions at two laboratories in order to obtain an estimation of the variability in the physical tests. An equivalent study was performed using stochastic simulation with a metamodel fed with observed variability in impact conditions of physical headforms. An estimation of the test method uncertainty was obtained and used in the definition of a validation corridor for simulation models. Validation metric and criteria were defined in cooperation with the ISO TC22 SC10 and SC12 WG4 "Virtual Testing". A complete validation procedure including different test setups, physical magnitudes and evaluation criteria is provided. A detailed procedural flowchart is developed for VT implementation in EC Regulation No 78/2009 based on a so called "Hybrid VT" approach, which combines real hardware based head impact tests and simulations. This detailed flowchart is shown and explained within this paper. Another important point within the virtual testing based procedures is the documentation of relevant information resulting from the verification and validation process of the numerical models used. For this purpose report templates were developed within the project. The proposed procedure fixes minimum V&V requirements for numerical models to be confidently used within the type-approval process. It is not intended to be a thorough guide on how to build such reliable models. Different modeling methodologies are therefore possible, according to particular OEM know-how. These requirements respond to a balance amongst the type-approval stakeholders interests. A cost-benefit analysis, which was also performed within the IMVITER project, supports this approach, showing the conditions in which VT implementation is beneficial. Based on the experience gained in the project and the background of the experts involved an outlook is given as a roadmap of VT implementation, identifying the most important milestones to be reached along the way to a future vehicle type approval procedure supported by VT. The results presented in this paper show an important step addressing open questions and fostering the future acceptance of virtual testing in pedestrian protection type approval procedures.
Einfluss der veränderten Verkehrsführung bei Ertüchtigungsmaßnahmen auf die Bauwerksbeanspruchungen
(2013)
Im Rahmen von mehreren vorhergehenden Forschungsprojekten wurden vom Forschungsnehmer Untersuchungen zu den Beanspruchungen von Brückenbauwerken infolge des Straßenverkehrs durchgeführt. Die Ergebnisse dieser Untersuchungen führten zu den neuen Verkehrslastannahmen für Straßenbrücken im Eurocode 1, Teil 2 (in Verbindung mit dem deutschen nationalen Anhang) und den Ziellastniveaus in der Nachrechnungsrichtlinie. Im Ergebnis von Nachrechnungen müssen die Bestandsbrücken ertüchtigt oder neu gebaut werden. Ertüchtigung von Autobahnbrücken heißt Bauen unter Verkehr. Auf den Bestandsbrücken ist eine veränderte Verkehrsführung erforderlich. Mit einer veränderten Verkehrsführung geht aber unter Umständen auch eine Veränderung der Beanspruchungen der Brückenbauwerke infolge dieser "Umnutzung" einher. Ziel des vorliegenden Forschungsprojektes ist es, den Einfluss der veränderten Verkehrsführung bei Ertüchtigungsmaßnahmen auf die Bauwerksbeanspruchungen zu analysieren. Unter Anwendung einer in den vorhergehenden Projekten entwickelten Vorgehensweise werden Simulationsrechnungen durchgeführt, in denen verschiedenen Varianten von Spuranordnungen auf Überbauquerschnitten betrachtet werden. Des Weiteren werden differenzierte Verkehrscharakteristiken, also verschiedene Verkehrsstärken und Verkehrszusammensetzungen, betrachtet. Grundsätzlich werden hierbei Beanspruchungen, also zum Beispiel resultierende Biegemomente oder Auflagerkräfte, betrachtet. Aus diesem Grund müssen die Berechnungen für definierte Tragsysteme durchgeführt werden. Im vorliegenden Projekt wurden hierzu zwei reale Brückenbauwerke betrachtet, die sich im Zuge von Autobahnen in Nordrhein-Westfalen befinden. Erweitert werden die Betrachtungen auf ein zusätzliches "virtuelles" Tragsystem, um ein gewisses Spektrum von Stützweiten und Querschnittsbreiten analysieren zu können. Grundsätzlich zeigt sich im Ergebnis der Untersuchungen, dass Beanspruchungen aus aktuellem Verkehr bei normaler Verkehrsführung durch das Lastmodell LM1 des DIN-Fachberichtes 101 abgedeckt werden. Für Beanspruchungen aus zukünftigem Verkehr ist das neue Lastmodell LM1 des Eurocodes erforderlich. Im Rahmen von Baumaßnahmen wird im Allgemeinen eine 4+0-Verkehrsführung eingerichtet. Hierbei werden bei zweiteiligen Überbauquerschnitten vier Fahrstreifen über einen Querschnitt geleitet. Dies geht einher mit einer Verengung der Fahrspuren. In solchen Fällen ist davon auszugehen, dass es nicht möglich ist, dass Lkw-Überholverkehr stattfinden kann. Dies führt zu einer wesentlichen Verringerung der Beanspruchungen von Brückenbauwerken, da auch in Stausituationen in den zwei Richtungsfahrbahnen keine Lkw-Fahrzeuge nebeneinander stehen können. Für Verkehrszusammensetzungen entsprechend der aus der Nachrechnungsrichtlinie bekannten Verkehrsart "Große Entfernung" (50 % Sattelzugfahrzeuge) ergibt sich daher eine Abdeckung der Beanspruchungen aus Straßenverkehr durch das Lastmodell BK60 der DIN 1072. Für Verkehrszusammensetzungen analog der Verkehrsart "Mittlere Entfernung" reicht das Lastmodell BK30/30 zu Abdeckung aus. Weitere Differenzierungen hinsichtlich der Verkehrsstärke führen hier zu keinen wesentlichen Änderungen der getroffenen Aussagen.
Ziel des Projektes war es, bedingt durch die wachsende Anzahl der im Verkehr befindlichen elektrisch und hybrid-elektrisch betriebenen Fahrzeuge, notwendige Anpassungen der periodisch technischen Überwachung zu erarbeiten. Dazu wurden von verschiedenen Fahrzeugen die relevanten Bauteile des elektrischen Antriebsstrangs identifiziert und deren Ausfallverhalten analysiert. Um die Degradationsauswirkungen einzelner Bauteile und Funktionen auf das gesamte System bestimmen zu können, hat die FSD ein Simulationsmodell erstellt. Die daraus ermittelten Ergebnisse waren Grundlage für die Bestimmung verkehrssicherheits- und umweltkritischer Bauteile sowie deren Funktionen. Diese Modellaussagen wurden mit Realversuchen an Fahrzeugen validiert. Zusätzlich konnten in einem Feldversuch 2.560 Fahrzeuge mit elektrischem Antriebsstrang untersucht werden. Aus diesen Ergebnissen lassen sich Änderungsvorschläge für die Untersuchungen und Vorgaben ableiten. Dafür ist für einen Großteil dieser Untersuchungen die Nutzung von Diagnosedaten eine geeignete Möglichkeit. Die 47. Verordnung zur Änderung straßenverkehrsrechtlicher Vorschriften berücksichtigt bereits an vielen Stellen die neuen Antriebskonzepte. Von daher werden lediglich geringe Anpassungen in der StVZO für -§ 19 und den Beispielkatalog dazu, -§ 29, Anlage VIIIa, Anlage VIIId sowie die HU-Richtlinie vorgeschlagen. Für die Durchführung der Untersuchungspunkte zum HV-System ist die Entwicklung einer Hochvolt-Richtlinie empfehlenswert. Einige wichtige Prüfverfahren lassen sich derzeit technisch noch nicht umsetzen. Dazu sind Änderungen der internationalen Bau- und Betriebsvorschriften notwendig. Diese werden bei der EU/UNECE anzuregen sein. Es besteht über dieses Projekt hinaus weiterhin Forschungsbedarf, um sich intensiv mit diesen Fahrzeugen zu befassen und deren Weiterentwicklung zu beobachten, damit notwendige Auswirkungen auf die PTI rechtzeitig erkannt werden können.
Ziel der Untersuchung war es, anhand realer Fälle adaptive Steuerungen von Lichtsignalanlagen für städtische Hauptverkehrsstraßen mit konventionellen Steuerungen zu vergleichen. Für die Untersuchung wurden je zwei Hauptverkehrsstraßen in Münster und Remscheid ausgesucht, auf denen adaptive Steuerungen eingerichtet wurden. Dabei wurde zunächst eine konventionelle Koordinierung mit weitgehend verkehrsabhängigen Elementen hergestellt. Zusätzlich konnte jeweils eine adaptive Steuerung geschaltet werden. Auf allen Strecken wurden systematisch Testfahrten bei Schaltung der verschiedenen Steuerungszustände durchgeführt. Die hierbei mittels GPS aufgezeichneten Fahrzeugtrajektorien wurden hinsichtlich der Anzahl von Halten und der Wartezeiten analysiert, um so zu einer verkehrstechnischen Beurteilung zu gelangen. Auf der ersten Teststrecke in Münster konnte durch die adaptive Steuerung eine deutliche Verbesserung des Verkehrsablaufs erreicht werden. Auf der zweiten Teststrecke in Münster ließ sich dieser Erfolg nicht wiederholen. Es traten teilweise erhebliche verkehrliche Verschlechterungen bei Schaltung der adaptiven Steuerung ein. Auf den Teststrecken in Remscheid ergaben sich durch die adaptive Steuerung in jeweils einer Fahrtrichtung Verbesserungen des Verkehrsflusses. Dem stehen jedoch Verschlechterungen in der Gegenrichtung gegenüber. Weil eine direkte Erfassung der Immissionen vor Ort nicht möglich war, wurde eine Antwort hinsichtlich der ökologischen Wirkungen durch mikroskopische Simulation gesucht. Für je eine Strecke in Münster und Remscheid wurde die adaptive Steuerung in ein VISSIM-Modell integriert. Die simulierten Fahrzeugtrajektorien wurden durch das Verfahren PHEM im Hinblick auf die Schätzung der Emissionen analysiert. Dabei zeigte sich in Münster eine leichte Verbesserung (1,0 %) der ökologischen Auswirkungen als Folge der adaptiven Steuerung. In Remscheid zeigte sich nach den eingetretenen ungünstigen verkehrlichen Wirkungen erwartungsgemäß auch eine Verschlechterung der ökologischen Auswirkungen. Die Ergebnisse der mikroskopischen Simulation in Verbindung mit der adaptiven Steuerung auf diesem Streckenzug unterlagen jedoch erheblichen Schwankungen, sodass hiermit lediglich tendenzielle Aussagen möglich sind. Im Ergebnis zeigte sich, dass die adaptiven Verfahren die Möglichkeit eröffnen, den Verkehrsfluss auf städtischen Hauptverkehrsstraßen zu verflüssigen. Dabei können auch Verbesserungen hinsichtlich der Schadstoffemissionen und des Energieverbrauchs eintreten. Diese Verbesserungen können jedoch nicht uneingeschränkt vorausgesetzt werden, sondern bedürfen einer zum Teil längerfristigen, kostenintensiven Einstellungsphase.
The head impact of pedestrians in the windscreen area shows a high relevance in real-world accidents. Nevertheless, there are neither biomechanical limits nor elaborated testing procedures available. Furthermore, the development of deployable protection systems like pop-up bonnets or external airbags has made faster progress than the corresponding testing methods. New requirements which are currently not considered are taken into account within a research project of BASt and the EC funded APROSYS (Advanced PROtection SYStems) integrated project relating to passive pedestrian protection. Testing procedures for head impact in the windscreen area should address these new boundary conditions. The presented modular procedure combines the advantages of virtual testing, including full-scale multi-body and finite element simulations, as well as hardware testing containing impactor tests based on the existing procedures of EEVC WG 17. To meet the efforts of harmonization in legislation, it refers to the Global Technical Regulation of UNECE (GTR No. 9). The basis for this combined hardware and virtual testing procedure is a robust categorization covering all passenger cars and light commercial vehicles and defining the testing zone including the related kinematics. The virtual testing part supports also the choice of the impact points for the hardware test and determines head impact timing for testing deployable systems. The assessment of the neck rotation angle and sharp edge contact in the rear gap of pop-up bonnets is included. For the demonstration of this procedure, a hardware sedan shaped vehicle was modified by integrating an airbag system. In addition, tests with the Honda Polar-II Dummy were performed for an evaluation of the new testing procedure. Comparing these results, it was concluded that a combination of simulation and updated subsystem tests forms an important step towards enhanced future pedestrian safety systems considering the windscreen area and the deployable systems.
In the last years there has been a decline in accident figures in Germany especially for four wheeled vehicles. At the same time, accident figures for motorcycles remained nearly constant. About 17 % of road traffic fatalities in the year 2006 were motorcyclists. 33 % of these riders were killed in single vehicle crashes. This leads to the conclusion that improving driving dynamics and driving stability of powered two wheelers would yield considerable safety gains. However, the well-known measures for cars and trucks with their proven effectiveness cannot be transferred easily to motorcycles. Therefore studies were carried out to examine the safety potential of Anti Lock Braking Systems (ABS) and Vehicle Stability Control (VSC) for motorcycles by means of accident analysis, driving tests and economical as well as technical assessment of the systems. With regard to ABS, test persons were assigned braking tasks (straight and in-curve) with five different brake systems with and without ABS. Stopping distances as well as stress and strain on the riders were measured for 9 test riders who completed 105 braking manoeuvres each. Knowing the ability of ABS to avoid falls during braking in advance of a crash and taking into account the system costs, a cost benefit analysis for ABS for motorcycles was carried out for different market penetration of ABS, i.e. equipment rates, and different time horizons. The potential of VSC for motorcycles was estimated in two steps. First the kinds of accidents that could be prevented by such a system at all have been analysed. For these accident configurations, simulations and driving tests were then performed to determine if a VSC was able to detect the critical driving situation and if it was technically possible to implement an actuator which would help to stabilise the critical situation.
Accident research 2.0: New methods for representative evaluation of integral safety in traffic
(2013)
BMW has developed a procedure for rating Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) benefits that integrates two distinct tools. The tool "S.A.F.E.R." is designed to analyze the pre-crash phase. The aim of S.A.F.E.R. is to simulate all relevant processes in sufficient detail to obtain reproducible estimates of key indicators (effectiveness, false positives, etc.). The relevant processes include not only traffic and vehicle dynamics, but also environmental and most importantly human factors. Representative distributions of factors and parameters are obtained by taking the stochastic variation of all relevant parameters into account in the simulations. The second tool, known as "ICOS", has been designed to provide a high-resolution, high-fidelity description of crash phase dynamics. If one converts the outputs of stochastic simulation into inputs for crash dynamics, the result is a comprehensive description of exactly how a safety system can reduce injuries. Applications currently focus on high-fidelity simulation of individual crashes in order to enhance our understanding and optimization of connected safety systems. An integrated simulation process thus allows an exact prediction of the effectiveness in individual cases in terms of injury severity. The development and rating of integral safety need to reflect the true efficiency in the field. The integrated approach described here could provide a valid and reproducible basis for rating connected systems of active and passive safety. In particular, "virtual experiments" using a traffic-based approach and incorporating models of all relevant processes constitute an essential element of the approach.
The presentation deals with the simulation tool rateEFFECT which intends to answer the following questions: Which active safety systems should be developed to maximize safety benefit in real traffic accidents? What is the effectiveness of a specific active safety system in the real world? How many casualties could be avoided by such a system? It is shown that a lot of information is required to simulate existing accidents in order to estimate ADAS effects. This particularly includes numerical values for the pre-crash and in-crash phase. The database GIDAS provides a required minimum number of these parameters for a statistically significant sample.
The paper aims to study the injury risk and kinematics of pedestrians involved in different passenger vehicle collisions. Furthermore, the difference of pedestrian kinematics in the accidents involved minivan and sedan was analyzed. The 18 sample cases of passenger car to pedestrian collisions were selected from the database of In-depth Investigation of Vehicle Accident in Changsha of China (IVAC),of which the 12 pedestrian accidents involved in a minivan impact for each case, and the 6 accidents in a sedan impact for each. The selected cases were reconstructed by using mathematical models of pedestrians and accident vehicles in a multi-body dynamic code MADYMO environment. The logistic regression models of the risks for pedestrian AIS 3+ injuries and fatalities were developed in terms of vehicle impact speed by analyzing the minivan-pedestrian and sedan-pedestrian accidents. The difference of pedestrian kinematics was identified by comparing the results from reconstructed pedestrian accidents between the minivans and sedans collisions. The result shows that there is a significant correlation among the impact speed and the severity of pedestrian injuries. The minivan poses greater risk to pedestrian than sedan at the same impact speed. The kinematics of pedestrian was greatly influenced by vehicle front shape.
The number of road accidents in Portugal has decreased significantly in the last decades, however, this tendency is not similar in all types of transportation. In the most recent years and by European standards, Portugal is still one of the leading countries concerning the number of fatalities in Powered Two Wheelers (PTW) accidents. To this effect, the in-depth investigation of PTW accidents is crucial and so, a thorough statistical analysis concerning the main factors influencing PTW riders injury severity accidents was undertaken regarding the 2007-2010 period in the National Road Safety Authority (ANSR) injured riders database using the software SPSS. In addition, to determine the importance of absent factors in the database analysis, such as velocity, a set of 53 real accidents involving PTW were also investigated and computationally reconstructed using the software PC-Crash. Lateral collisions between a motorcycle, its rider and the side of three different passenger cars were also simulated, varying the motorcycle impact angle and velocity in order to estimate the PTW deformation energy and the rider- injuries, as this accident configuration stands out in terms of frequency and even severity. The results of this detailed study are presented.
Real world accident reconstruction with the Total Human Model for Safety (THUMS) in Pam-Crash
(2013)
Further improvement of vehicle safety needs detailed analysis of real world accidents. According to GIDAS (German In-Depth Accident Study) most car to car front accidents occur at mid-crash severity. In this range thoracic injuries already occur. In this study a real world frontal crash with mid-crash severity out of the AARU database was reconstructed. The selected car to car accident was reconstructed by AARU by means of pc-crash software in order to get the initial dynamic accident conditions. These initial conditions were used to reconstruct the complete accident in more detail using FE models for the car structure and the occupants. Occupant simulations were performed with FE HIII-dummy models and the THUMS using Pam-Crash code. An initial THUMS validation was performed in order to verify the model-´s biofidelity by means of table-top test simulations. THUMS bone stiffness values were modified to match the real word occupant age. A comparison between driver and passenger restraint system loading was done, as well as an injury prediction comparison between the HIII-dummy model and THUMS response for both cases. Detailed comparison between the HIII-dummy models and THUMS regarding thoracic loading are discussed.
The main objective of EC CASPER research project is to reduce fatalities and injuries of children travelling in cars. Accidents involving children were investigated, modelling of human being and tools for dummies were advanced, a survey for the diagnosis of child safety was carried out and demands and applications were analysed. From the many research tasks of the CASPER project, the intention of this paper is to address the following: • In-depth investigation of accidents and accident reconstruction. These will provide important points for the injury risk curve, in order to improve it. Different accident investigation teams collected data from real road accidents, involving child car passengers, in five different European countries. Then, a selection of the most appropriate cases for the injury risk curve and the purposes of the project was made for an in-depth analysis. The final stage of this analysis was to conduct an accident reconstruction to validate the results obtained. The in-depth analysis included on-scene accident investigation, creating virtual simulations of the accident/possible reconstruction, and conducting the reconstruction. In the cases of successful reconstructions, new points were introduced to the injury risk curves. Accident reconstructions of selected cases were carried out in test laboratories as the next step following in-depth road accident investigation. These cases were reconstructed using similar child restraint systems (CRS) and the same type make and model as in the real accidents. Reconstructing real cases has several limitations, such as crash angle, cars" approximation paths and crash speed. However, a few changes and applications on the testing conditions were applied to reduce the limitations and improved the representations of the real accidents. After conducting the reconstructions, a comparison between the deformations of the cars on the real accident and the vehicles from the reconstructions was made. Additionally, a correlation between the data captured from the dummies and the injury data from the real accident was sought. This finalises an in-depth analysis of the accident, which will provide new relevant points to the injury risk curve. The CASPER project conducted a large research programme on child safety. On technical points, a promising research area is the developing injury risk curves as a result of in-depth accident investigations and reconstructions. This abstract was written whilst the project was not yet finished and final results are not yet known, but they will be available by the time of the conference. All the works and findings will not necessarily be integrated in the industrial versions of evaluation tools as the CASPER project is a research program.