Impact & Energy Absorption of Road Safety Barriers by Coupled SPH/FEM

Author:

Thiyahuddin I.1,Gu Y.T.1,Thambiratnam D. P.2,Gudimetla P.3

Affiliation:

1. School of Chemistry, Physics and Mechanical Engineering, Queensland University of Technology, 4000 Brisbane, Australia

2. School of Civil Engineering and Built Environment, formerly, Queensland University of Technology, 4000 Brisbane, Australia

3. School of Engineering Systems, Queensland University of Technology, 4000 Brisbane, Australia

Abstract

Road safety barriers are used to minimise the severity of road accidents and protect lives and property. There are several types of barrier in use today. This paper reports the initial phase of research carried out to study the impact response of portable water-filled barrier (PWFB) which has the potential to absorb impact energy and hence provide crash mitigation under low to moderate speeds. Current research on the impact and energy absorption capacity of water-filled road safety barriers is limited due to the complexity of fluid-structure interaction under dynamic impact. In this paper, a novel fluid-structure interaction method is developed based on the combination of Smooth Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) and Finite Element Method (FEM). The sloshing phenomenon of water inside a PWFB is investigated to explore the energy absorption capacity of water under dynamic impact. It was found that water plays an important role in energy absorption. The coupling analysis developed in this paper will provide a platform to further the research in optimising the behaviour of the PWFB. The effect of the amount of water on its energy absorption capacity is investigated and the results have practical applications in the design of PWFBs.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Mechanics of Materials,Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality,Building and Construction

Reference56 articles.

1. Bureau of Infrastructure Transport and Regional Economics [BITRE], Road crash costs in Australia in 1996. 2000, Australian Goverment: Canberra. p. 116.

2. Motor vehicle crashes in roadway construction workzones: An analysis using narrative text from insurance claims

3. Traffic Barriers under Vehicular Impact: From Computer Simulation to Design Guidelines

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