Welcome to Journal of Automotive Safety and Energy,

Journal of Automotive Safety and Energy ›› 2023, Vol. 14 ›› Issue (6): 671-680.DOI: 10.3969/j.issn.1674-8484.2023.06.003

• Automotive Safety • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Pedestrian lower limb dynamic response and injury biomechanical analysis based on pedestrian-vehicle collision accident reconstruction

ZHANG Daowen1,2,3(), LEI Yi1(), REN Yao1, TANG Kaiwen1, DONG Xinchi1, LUO Jing1, HU Wenhao4,5,*()   

  1. 1. School of Automobile and Transportation, Xihua University, Chengdu 610039, China
    2. Vehicle Measurement Control and Safety Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, Chengdu 610039, China
    3. Provincial Engineering Research Center for New Energy Vehicle Intelligent Control and Simulation Test Technology of Sichuan, Chengdu 610039, China
    4. Defective Product Administrative Center, State Administration for Market Regulation, Beijing 100191, China
    5. Automobile Product Defect Engineering Analysis Laboratory, Beijing 100191, China
  • Received:2023-06-02 Revised:2023-10-07 Online:2023-12-31 Published:2023-12-26

Abstract:

Based on real traffic accident cases in the national vehicle accident depth investigation system, a human-vehicle collision finite element model was established and verified to investigate the lower limb kinematic response and biomechanical injury characteristics of pedestrians in human-vehicle collisions. Three postures of pedestrians standing, walking and running, were simulated with THUMS dummy, and three collision positions were selected according to the transverse structure characteristics of the front of the vehicle, and the kinematic response and biomechanical injury of pedestrian lower limbs at the collision position were analyzed. The results show that the lateral structure of the front of the vehicle has a great influence on the motion response and injury of the left and right legs of pedestrians at a collision initial velocity of 40 km/h; the high-risk areas of the pedestrian femur are the femoral head and femoral shaft, with a maximum value of 124.9 MPa, while the high-risk area of the tibia is the tibial shaft, with a maximum value of 157.2 MPa; the maximum transverse bending angle and the maximum shear displacement of the left knee joint reaches 37.1° and 12.5 mm, respectively, and its injury risk is higher than that of the right knee joint; in the headlight collision area, the pedestrian's lower limb sufferes a lower injury than that of the other collision areas.

Key words: automotive safety, human-vehicle collisions, pedestrian lower limb kinematic response, biomechanical injury, finite element, THUMS dummy

CLC Number: