Affiliation:
1. Department of Biomedical Engineering and Mechanics (BEAM), C
Abstract
<div class="section abstract"><div class="htmlview paragraph">The pedestrian is one of the most vulnerable road users and has experienced
increased numbers of injuries and deaths caused by car-to-pedestrian collisions
over the last decade. To curb this trend, finite element models of pedestrians
have been developed to investigate pedestrian protection in vehicle impact
simulations. While useful, modeling practices vary across research groups,
especially when applying knee/ankle ligament and bone failure. To help better
standardize modeling practices this study explored the effect of knee ligament
and bone element elimination on pedestrian impact outcomes. A male 50th
percentile model was impacted by three European generic vehicles at 30, 40, and
50 km/h. The pedestrian model was set to three element elimination settings: the
“Off-model” didn’t allow any element erosion, the “Lig-model” allowed
lower-extremity ligament erosion, and the “All-model” allowed lower-extremity
ligament and bone erosion. Failure toggling had a significant effect on impact
outcomes (0 < p ≤ 0.03). The head impact time response was typically the
smallest for the “Off-model” while the wrap around distance response was always
largest for the All-model. Moderate differences in maximum vehicle-pedestrian
contact forces across elimination techniques were reported in this study (0.1 –
1.7 kN). Future work will examine additional failure modelling approaches, model
anthropometries and vehicles to expand this investigation.</div></div>
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