The effect of leg fracture level and vehicle front-end geometry on pedestrian knee injury and response

Author:

Dunmore M C1,Brooks R1,Madeley N J2,McNally D S1

Affiliation:

1. School of Mechanical, Materials, & Manufacturing Engineering, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK

2. Department of Orthopaedics, University Hospital of Leicester, UK

Abstract

In this study a MADYMO® (mathematical dynamic modelling) model has been used to identify the influence of leg fracture on the injuries sustained by the pedestrian during front end impact with a vehicle. A factorial study of a MADYMO® pedestrian and vehicle model are used to investigate the effect of different leg fracture tolerances, geometry, and vehicle compliance on the criteria measured in the European Enhanced Vehicle-safety Committee (EEVC) pedestrian safety tests. These criteria include knee bending, knee shear response, and lower leg bone (tibia) acceleration. The main study examines the spread of typical values of lower limb tolerance based on reported literature and contrasts the response of weaker, low-strength bones, normal tolerance, and limbs which do not fracture. Results show that knee bending angles and therefore ligament strains are significantly increased when fracture does not occur, and are decreased in bones exhibiting a low-strength response. Bone fracture tolerance is shown to be a significant parameter influencing knee bending. The parameters are compared to show that knee shear is significantly influenced by vehicle bumper compliance and that both criteria are heavily influenced by bumper height. Vehicles with more aggressive geometry, higher bumpers, and larger bumper lead were considered for comparative purposes.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,General Medicine

Reference12 articles.

1. Directive 2003/102/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 November 2003 relating to the protection of pedestrians and other vulnerable road users before and in the event of a collision with a motor vehicle and amending Council Directive 70/156/EEC. Official J. Eur. Union, 2003, 46, L 321.

2. Mathematical simulation of knee responses associated with leg fracture in car-pedestrian accidents

3. Effects of vehicle bumper height and impact velocity on type of lower extremity injury in vehicle–pedestrian accidents

4. New injury reference values determined for TRL legform impactor from accident reconstruction test

5. Reconstruction analysis for car–pedestrian accidents using a computer simulation model

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