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According to the researchers, the new truck front (right) can save many lives

Photo: Trafikverket / dpa

Collisions between heavy trucks and cars often end in death for the car occupants.

To reduce the number of fatal collisions, a team from Sweden's Chalmers University of Technology has developed a new truck front that was able to reduce car interior deformation by 30 to 60 percent in crash tests.

The more intact this interior remains, the lower the risk of injury and possibly death to the vehicle's occupants.

As the research group explains in a statement, collisions between trucks and cars accounted for between 14 and 16 percent of all fatal accidents involving car occupants in both the EU and the USA.

In more than 90 percent of traffic accidents involving trucks, the other party, usually a passenger, dies.

The Federal Statistical Office also writes in its report “Accidents involving freight vehicles in road traffic 2020” that due to the size and mass of the so-called freight vehicles, the consequences of accidents are usually significantly more severe for the other parties involved in the accident than for the freight vehicle users themselves.

Of those who died in truck accidents in 2020, 7,117 were passengers in freight vehicles and 22,765 were other road users.

Of those killed, 124 were passengers in freight vehicles and 492 were other road users.

"The risk of being killed in a 'truck accident' is therefore almost four times higher for other people involved in the accident (including passengers) than for the occupants of a freight vehicle," the report says.

Structure is designed to absorb energy

According to the Swedish researchers, the most common types of accidents include head-on collisions on country roads and rear-end collisions on motorways in which the truck drives into the rear of the car in front - in order for the car occupants to survive, the car cabin must remain as intact as possible.

But even modern cars couldn't do that in collisions with heavy trucks.

That's why the Swedish research team has now designed a new truck front that is intended to make the impact process safer for the car occupants.

In photos published by the university, the front looks like a protruding, slat-reinforced box.

»The interior design of the new truck front consists of aluminum honeycombs.

"It's a structure made up of repeating hexagonal tubes made of aluminum foil," explains Robert Thomson from the university's vehicle safety department.

This structure is ideal for a light, energy-absorbing structure because around 97 percent of the volume consists of air.

»Aluminum honeycombs are used in many crash test barriers to create distributed force and absorb energy.

By changing the film thickness, we can change the force and deformation properties,” says Thomson.

In addition, the design offers the necessary flexibility in manufacturing to create prototypes and demonstrate the possibility of implementation.

The new truck front has already proven itself in crash tests: the researchers let a heavily loaded truck with the new front collide with a car at a speed of 50 kilometers per hour: In the tests, an original driving speed of 80 km/h was achieved simulated, which has been reduced by 30 km/h by automatic emergency braking systems, as required in newer cars and trucks.

According to the research group, the tests showed that the structure can reduce deformation of the car interior by 30 to 60 percent, reducing the risk of injury to vehicle occupants.

In addition, the new front also reduces the deformation of the truck in sensitive areas, which increases the safety of the truck drivers and the load.


svs/dpa