Highway/heavy Vehicle Interaction

Highway/heavy Vehicle Interaction
Author: Douglas W. Harwood
Publisher: Transportation Research Board
Total Pages: 105
Release: 2003
Genre: Buses
ISBN: 0309087562

TRB's Commercial Truck and Bus Safety Synthesis Program (CTBSSP) Synthesis 3: Highway/Heavy Vehicle Interaction reports on the safety interactions of commercial trucks and buses with highway features and on highway improvements that can be made to improve the safety of heavy vehicle operations.

Dynamic Interaction Between Heavy Vehicles and Highway Bridges

Dynamic Interaction Between Heavy Vehicles and Highway Bridges
Author: Eduardo Enrique Taft
Publisher:
Total Pages: 115
Release: 2010
Genre:
ISBN:

ABSTRACT: Three FE models of heavy vehicles were used with three different bridges for computational dynamics analysis using the LS-DYNA computer code. The influence of several factors such as vehicle mass and speed, road surface condition, and loosely secured cargo were assessed. Dynamic load allowance (DLA) was determined for each vehicle-bridge combination. Practical conclusions regarding methods to mitigate DLAs were presented.

Handbook of Vehicle-Road Interaction

Handbook of Vehicle-Road Interaction
Author: David Cebon
Publisher: CRC Press
Total Pages: 612
Release: 2000-01-01
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 9789026515545

This handbook dicussess tyre-road contact forces generated by heavy vehicles covering their influence on road surface and bridge response and damage, as well as ways of regulating and improving vehicles so as to minimize road damage.;The main incentive for understanding vehicle-road interaction is the possibility of reducing the road damage caused by heavy vehicles and the very high associated costs. This may be achieved by highway authorities, through improved design and construction of roads; by government agencies, through regulations intended to encourage the use of more "road-friendly" vehicles; or by vehicle engineers, through design of improved vehicle configurations and suspensions, which minimize road damage.;The book provides a unified mechanistic approach to the entire subject, covering vehicle dynamics; dynamic tyre forces; weigh-in-motion; pavement and bridge response; damage mechanisms of paving materials; vehicle-guideway interaction; suspension design to minimize road damage; and assessing road damaging potential of vehicles for regulatory purposes. It includes 25 literature reviews, covering topics from asphalt deformation to weigh-in-motion, and citing over 500 references. In addition, it discusses both the fundamental mechanics of the mechanical and civil engineering systems, as well as practical and implementation issues.

Vehicle-road Interaction

Vehicle-road Interaction
Author: Bohdan T. Kulakowski
Publisher: ASTM International
Total Pages: 264
Release: 1994
Genre: Pavements
ISBN: 0803118937

Proceedings of a conference held in Santa Barbara, California, in May 1992. Topics include simulation and analysis of trucks using the program BAMMS, predicting vertical dynamic tire forces of heavy trucks, factors affecting the design and use of the Texas Mobile Load Simulator, traction tests on an

Interaction between Automated Vehicles and other Road Users

Interaction between Automated Vehicles and other Road Users
Author: Philipp Wintersberger
Publisher: Frontiers Media SA
Total Pages: 151
Release: 2024-09-10
Genre: Science
ISBN: 2832550517

An increasing number of automated vehicles will pervade our traffic systems in the future. The absence of a human driver requires these vehicles to communicate to, and interact with other traffic participants, such as vulnerable road users (pedestrians, cyclists, and emerging mobility forms like eBikes or scooters), but potentially also drivers of manual vehicles. In this regard, various studies and concepts demonstrating so-called “external Human-Machine Interfaces” (eHMIs) have been presented in the past couple of years. Many of these works have investigated comparably simple scenarios, such as a single pedestrian aiming to cross the street when an automated vehicle is approaching. Although we still welcome such contributions, research in this area will have to take more complex situations into account. This drives the need for research addressing other situations involving groups of vulnerable road users and traffic participants, different scenarios including roundabouts or urban shared spaces, but also exploring the potential of communication and interaction beyond such classical situations to improve cooperation in traffic.