Experimental assessment of vehicle performance and injury risk for cutaway buses using tilt table and modified dolly rollover tests
Autor: | Jerzy Wekezer, Grzegorz Dolzyk, Sungmoon Jung, MohammadReza Seyedi |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
050210 logistics & transportation
Computer science 05 social sciences Accidents Traffic Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health Poison control Human Factors and Ergonomics Seat Belts Kinematics Rollover Risk Assessment Automotive engineering Motor Vehicles Hybrid III 0502 economics and business Injury prevention Humans Wounds and Injuries Crashworthiness 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Body region Safety Risk Reliability and Quality Paratransit human activities 050107 human factors |
Zdroj: | Accident Analysis & Prevention. 132:105287 |
ISSN: | 0001-4575 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.aap.2019.105287 |
Popis: | Rollover crashes of buses occur less frequently than do those involving passenger cars; however, they are associated with higher fatality rates. During rollover crashes, a vehicle experiences multidirectional acceleration and multiple impacts, yielding a complex interaction between structural components and its occupants. A better understanding of vehicle and occupant's motion, structural deformation, and vehicle and road interactions are necessary to improve the safety of the occupants during this event. One of the key factors in rollover crashworthiness assessment is to investigate the relationship between the strength of the vehicle's structure and the risk of injury outcomes. However, rollover crashes involving buses have received less research attention than have those involving passenger cars. Experimental studies in bus rollover safety have mainly focused on the structural integrity of the passenger compartment without considering the occupant responses. The main goal of this research is to evaluate the rollover mechanism and associated injury risk during two experimental rollover tests for a paratransit cutaway bus that is commonly used by transit agencies.The modified dolly rollover (MDR) and tilt table (TT) tests were conducted using a similar bus and anthropomorphic test device (ATD) configurations. In each test, a 2-point and 3-point belted Hybrid III 50The residual space remained intact (DI 1) during both rollover tests, however, the ATD responses were quite different. The results of the injury assessment indicate that the risk of the injuries in the MDR test was significantly higher than the TT test. The highest risk of injuries was identified for the head, neck, and shoulder of 2-point belted ATD during the MDR test. Also, the main source of injuries during the MDR test was partial ejection due to the shattered side window, whereas for the TT test impacts between the ATDs and the side window and/or window frame were the injury causes. From the vehicle point of view, the total energy produced in the MDR was 3.5 times higher than the TT test, but the overall structural deformation in the TT test was higher than MDR test. Overall, the tilt table test provides a more severe scenario compared to the MDR test for the assessment of structural strength. Considering the limited real-world injury data in rollover crashes of buses, the MDR test presented the more realistic occupant responses. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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