Biomedical Engineering, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Wake Forest University Center for Injury Biomechanics, Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Traffic Inj Prev. 2019;20(sup2):S32-S36. doi: 10.1080/15389588.2019.1637518. Epub 2019 Jul 29.
Finite element human body models (HBMs) must be certified for use within the EuroNCAP pedestrian safety assessment protocol. We demonstrate that the Global Human Body Model Consortium (GHBMC) simplified pedestrian series of HBMs meet all criteria set forth in Technical Bulletin (TB) 024 (v 1.1 Jan. 2019) for model certification. We further explore variation in head contact time (HIT) and location by HBM size and impact speed across 48 full body impact simulations. The EuroNCAP Pedestrian Protocol (v. 8.5, Oct. 2018) assesses the overall safety of adult and child pedestrians by outlining a variety of physical tests and finite element simulations using HBMs. These tests are designed to assess the efficacy of vehicle safety technology such as active bonnets. The 50th percentile male simplified pedestrian model (M50-PS, H:175 cm, W:74.5 kg), six-year-old (6YO-PS, H:117 cm, W:23.4 kg), 5th percentile female (F05-PS, H:150 cm, W:50.7 kg), and 95th percentile male (M95-PS, H:190 cm, W:102 kg) were simulated through the suite of cases totaling 48 simulations (12 each). The process gathers three kinematic trajectories and contact force data from designated anatomical locations. The impacting vehicles include a family car (FCR), multi-purpose vehicle (MPV), roadster (RDS), and sports utility vehicle (SUV), all provided by TU Graz, Vehicle Safety Institute as part of the Coherent Project, each simulated at 30 kph, 40 kph, and 50 kph. Each simulation underwent a 23-point pre-simulation check and post-simulation model response comparison. The posture of all HBMs met criteria consisting of 15 measures. All simulations were conducted in LS-Dyna R. 7.1.2. All simulations normal terminated. For each of the simulations, sagittal plane coordinate histories of the center of the head, 12th thoracic vertebrae, and center of acetabulum were compared with standard corridors and did not exceed the tolerance of 50 mm deviation. Head contact time was also compared with the reference values and did not exceed the tolerance interval of +3.5% and -7%. Comparison of contact forces was required for monitoring purposes only. The head contact time of the models for each simulation was recorded and compared by model size, impact speed, and vehicle geometry. Head contact times varied by roughly 3-fold, were lowest for the child model, and showed the greatest sensitivity for the tallest stature model (M95-PS). As stated in the certification process, other body sizes within a model family qualify for certification if the 50th percentile male model passes, provided that model sizes meet the required posture.
人体有限元模型(HBM)必须经过认证才能在 EuroNCAP 行人安全评估协议中使用。我们证明,全球人体模型联合会(GHBMC)简化的行人系列 HBM 符合技术公告(TB)024(2019 年 1 月第 1.1 版)中规定的所有模型认证标准。我们进一步研究了在 48 次全身冲击模拟中,HBM 尺寸和冲击速度对头部接触时间(HIT)和位置的影响。EuroNCAP 行人协议(v.8.5,2018 年 10 月)通过使用 HBM 概述各种物理测试和有限元模拟,评估成人和儿童行人的整体安全性。这些测试旨在评估车辆安全技术(如主动引擎盖)的效果。50 百分位男性简化行人模型(M50-PS,H:175cm,W:74.5kg)、6 岁儿童(6YO-PS,H:117cm,W:23.4kg)、5 百分位女性(F05-PS,H:150cm,W:50.7kg)和 95 百分位男性(M95-PS,H:190cm,W:102kg)共进行了 48 次模拟(每次 12 次)。该过程从指定解剖位置收集三个运动轨迹和接触力数据。碰撞车辆包括家庭轿车(FCR)、多用途车(MPV)、敞篷车(RDS)和运动型多用途车(SUV),均由 TU Graz、车辆安全研究所提供,作为连贯项目的一部分,每种车辆在 30、40 和 50 公里/小时的速度下进行模拟。每次模拟都经过 23 点预模拟检查和模拟后模型响应比较。所有 HBM 的姿势都符合由 15 项措施组成的标准。所有模拟均在 LS-Dyna R.7.1.2 中进行。所有模拟均正常终止。对于每个模拟,头部中心、第 12 胸椎和髋臼中心的矢状面坐标历史记录与标准通道进行了比较,并且没有超过 50mm 偏差的容差。头部接触时间也与参考值进行了比较,没有超过+3.5%和-7%的容差范围。仅出于监测目的需要比较接触力。记录了每个模拟的模型的头部接触时间,并按模型尺寸、冲击速度和车辆几何形状进行了比较。头部接触时间变化约 3 倍,儿童模型最低,最高身高模型(M95-PS)最敏感。如认证过程中所述,如果 50 百分位男性模型通过,模型家族中的其他尺寸也有资格获得认证,前提是模型尺寸符合要求的姿势。