Abstract

The aims of this study were to achieve a quantitative assessment of the severity of accidents involving roadside trees on highways and to propose corresponding safety measures to reduce accident losses. This paper used the acceleration severity index (ASI), head injury criteria (HIC) and chest resultant acceleration (CRA) as indicators of occupant injuries and horizontal radii, vehicle departure speeds, tree diameters and roadside tree spacing as research variables to carry out bias collision tests between cars, trucks and trees by constructing a vehicle rigid body system and an occupant multibody system in PC-crash 10.0® simulation software. A total of 2,256 data points were collected. For straight and curved segments of highways, the occupant injury evaluation models of cars were fitted based on the CRA, and occupant injury evaluation models of trucks and cars were fitted based on the ASI. According to the Fisher optimal segmentation method, reasonable classification standards of severities of accidents involving roadside trees and the corresponding ASI and CRA thresholds were determined, and severity assessment methods for accidents involving roadside trees based on the CRA and ASI were provided. Additionally, a new index by which to evaluate the accuracy of the accident severity classification and the degree of misclassification was built and applied for the validity verification of the proposed severity assessment methods. A proportion of trucks was introduced to further improve the ASI evaluation model. For the same simulation conditions, the results show that driver chest injuries are more serious than driver head injuries and that the average ASI of cars is greater than that of trucks. The CRA and ASI have a positive linear correlation with the departure speed and a logarithmic correlation with the roadside tree diameters. The larger the spacing of roadside trees is and the smaller the horizontal radius is, the smaller the chance that a vehicle will experience a second collision and the lower the risk of occupant injury. In method validation, the evaluation results from two proposed severity assessment methods based on the CRA and ASI are consistent, and the degrees of misclassification are 4.65% and 4.26%, respectively, which verifies the accuracy of the methods proposed in this paper and confirms that the ASI can be employed as an effective index for evaluating occupant injuries in accidents involving roadside trees.

Highlights

  • According to numerous accident investigations, a substantial number of collisions between vehicles and roadside trees are often caused by driver inattention or failures to make timely turns on curved segments of road

  • The chest resultant acceleration (CRA), head injury criteria (HIC) and acceleration severity index (ASI) are used as the occupant injury indexes; a vehicle rigid body system and an occupant multibody system are constructed in PC-crash simulation software; and offset collision tests involving cars, trucks and roadside trees are performed

  • Based on the analysis of the relationship between the test parameters and the occupant injury indexes, the occupant injury evaluation models of accidents involving roadside trees based on the CRA and ASI are fitted for straight segments and curved segments of highways, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

According to numerous accident investigations, a substantial number of collisions between vehicles and roadside trees are often caused by driver inattention or failures to make timely turns on curved segments of road. To reduce losses due to roadside accidents, the “Roadside Design Guide 4th Edition” of AASHTO [2] proposed the concept of tolerant design. This concept suggests that an area where a driver who leaves the travel lane can regain control of their vehicle and safely return to the lane should be provided. The instantaneous energy produced by a collision can be reduced by adopting breakaway supports for signs, poles, lighting and other roadside objects, which decrease the severity of accidents [3,4]; this optimization design does not apply to trees. Many researchers have proposed targeted improvement measures to mitigate losses in accidents involving roadside trees by exploring the relationship between roadside trees and roadside accidents

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