Literature DB >> 26660753

Whole-body Response for Pedestrian Impact with a Generic Sedan Buck.

Jason L Forman1, Hamad Joodaki1, Ali Forghani1, Patrick O Riley1, Varun Bollapragada1, David J Lessley1, Brian Overby1, Sara Heltzel1, Jason R Kerrigan1, Jeff R Crandall1, Seth Yarboro2, David B Weiss2.   

Abstract

To serve as tools for assessing injury risk, the biofidelity of whole-body pedestrian impact dummies should be validated against reference data from full-scale pedestrian impact tests. To facilitate such evaluations, a simplified generic vehicle-buck has been recently developed that is designed to have characteristics representative of a generic small sedan. Three 40 km/h pedestrian-impact tests have been performed, wherein Post Mortem Human Surrogates (PMHS) were struck laterally in a mid-gait stance by the buck. Corridors for select trajectory measures derived from these tests have been published previously. The goal of this study is to act as a companion dataset to that study, describing the head velocities, body region accelerations (head, spine, pelvis, lower extremities), angular velocities, and buck interaction forces, and injuries observed during those tests. Scaled, transformed head accelerations exceeded 80 g prior to head contact with the windshield for two of the three tests. Head xaxis angular velocity exceeded 40 rad/s prior to head contact for all three tests. In all cases the peak resultant head velocity relative to the vehicle was greater than the initial impact speed of the vehicle. Corridors of resultant head velocity relative to the vehicle were also developed, bounded by the velocities observed in these tests combined with those predicted to occur if the PMHS necks were perfectly rigid. These results, along with the other kinematic and kinetic data presented, provide a resource for future pedestrian dummy development and evaluation.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26660753     DOI: 10.4271/2015-22-0016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stapp Car Crash J        ISSN: 1532-8546


  2 in total

1.  A Study on Influence of Minivan Front-End Design and Impact Velocity on Pedestrian Thorax Kinematics and Injury Risk.

Authors:  Fang Wang; Chao Yu; Guibing Li; Yong Han; Bingyu Wang; Jikuang Yang; Diandian Lan
Journal:  Appl Bionics Biomech       Date:  2018-09-03       Impact factor: 1.781

2.  A Computational Biomechanics Human Body Model Coupling Finite Element and Multibody Segments for Assessment of Head/Brain Injuries in Car-To-Pedestrian Collisions.

Authors:  Chao Yu; Fang Wang; Bingyu Wang; Guibing Li; Fan Li
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2020-01-13       Impact factor: 3.390

  2 in total

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