Course Notes-FACS
Foundamentals of Automotive Crash Safety
Lecture 1 Fundamentals of Vehicle Crash Safety
- impact energy absorption The kinetic energy is converted to work by deforming all the related objects
- Three levels of impact
- First impact: between vehicle front-end structure and external objects
- Second impact: between occupant and restraint system/interior
- Third impact: between occupant’s internal organs
- Crash safety
- a matter of reducing the relative velocity between occupants and vehicle interior to help reduce risk of injury to occupant during a collision
- Vehicle Crashworthiness
- Measure of the vehicle’s structural ability to plastically deform and yet maintain a sufficient survival space for its occupants in crashes involving loads**
Lecture 2 Vehicle Frontal Impact Response and
Occupant Ride-Down
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Crash pulse measurement
- Mounted in non-crash zone of occupant compartment
- Avoid low stiffness locations
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Injuries are produced by the occupant motion relative to vehicle interior
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Purpose of restraint system is to make the contacting speed lower
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The occupant kinetic energy is absorbed by three sources
- The restraint system
- The human body deformation
- The vehicle structure through restraint coupling (The Ride-Down Energy)
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Achieve the lowest force and acceleration, good to occupant protection in a general sense
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The occupant response
- The occupant response depends on both of the vehicle pulse and the occupant restraint system
- The effect of the occupant restraint has a limit
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Crash duration
Definition: from the time when the vehicle starts contacting the obstacle to the time when the acceleration diminishes to a negligible level (about 80~120 ms)
- Vehicle type – the stiffer the structure, the shorter the crash duration
- Crashing type – the softer the crash mode, the longer the crash duration
Lecture 3 Human Body Injuries in Vehicle Collisions
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Human body injury
deformation of anatomical structures beyond their failure limits resulting in damage of tissue
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Mechanical causes of body injuries:
- direct body contact
- no external contact : Inertial effect leads to internal squeeze or stretch
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human body injury tolerance
Mechanical parameter and value to gage severity of certain injury and define acceptance level $$ HIC = MAX \Bigg( \Big[\frac{1}{t_2 -t_1} \int_{t_1}^{t_2} a_g(t) dt \Big]^{2.5} (t_2 - t_1\Bigg) $$ Note: head injury is related both magnitude and duration of acceleration
Lecture 4 Vehicle Crash Safety Assessment
- Dummy: Anthropomorphic Test Device
- Hybrid III 50th Male has been adopted in world-wide automotive safety regulations, which is also the only daummy with broad basis in biofidelity.
- Other dummies were scaled from Hybrid III 50th Male.(Not only scale mass and size, but also injury thresholds)
- H3-50M neck: Match nech angle-torque response data in forward and rearward directions for humans seated in automotive posture.(Note the slits)
- H3-50M chest assembly: Represented by six high strength steel ribs with polymer based on damoing material.
- Chest acceleration
- Chest deflection
- H3-50M calibration
- Dummy mush be calibrated before test to guarantee its state
- Requirements of carsh test dummies
- Biofidelity
- Measure its human-likeness
- Size, mass, kinetic and dynamic responses under specified loadings.
- Sensitivity to injury parameters(sensitive and robust)
- Repeatability
- Same responses under the same impact test conditions
- Durability
- No damages under the conditions of the required impact test
- Biofidelity
- Two levels of biofidelity requirements
- First level to control overall kinematics
- Joint stiffness between articulated body regions
- Mass properties of individual assemblies
- Second level to control response of critical
assemblies
- Chest compression stiffness, head impact response, femur compressive response, etc
- First level to control overall kinematics
- Sled tests
- Low cost
- Quick
- Controllable
- Good repeatability and reliability
- Drawback: 1-D, no pitch
Lecture 5 Seatbelt and Airbag
Intro
- Modern seatbelts: a three-point anchorage system
- Seatbelt components: Belt, Retractor, Slip ring, Buckle, Anchor
- Typical seatbelt consists of two webbing sections:
- Lap belt
- Shoulder belt
- The spool effect: Belt webbing can be stetched to some extent: for belt force on occupant gradually increasing and occupant’s stopping not too abrupt
- Retrctor lock: vehicle and webbing sensitive
- Aurbag: package, inflator, crash sensors(ECU)
Safety functions
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Seatbelt
- Restrain occupant and reduce risk of occupant contact with vehicle interior
- Spread force across stronger parts of occupant body(shoulder and pelvis)
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Airbag
- Fill space between ocuupant and steering wheel or dashboard
- Apply force on occupant during occupant-airbag interactraction
- Reduce head rotation and protect head and neck
###Risks and hazards of airbag
- Occupant should not strike airbag until it is fully inflated(And it should deplot in a fraction of a second to be effective)
- Unbelted or out of position occupants can be seriously injured or killed by airbag
###risks of seatbelt
- Submarining: occupant slides down underneath lap-belt in frontal collision
- Concentrated loading to chest
Lecture 6 Seat as Occupant Impact Protection Device
Structures
- Rail system
- Adjust seat position forward and backward
- Secure seat position for safety
Seat and head restraint for anti-whiplash
- Seat and head restraint are critical for reducing neck whiplash injury risk
- Whiplash injury influence factors
- Gender
- Height
- Seating position
- Drivers have higher risk rate than passengers
- Drivers tend to sit away from seatback
- Passengers are usually more relaxed and lean further back in seats
- Drivers have higher risk rate than passengers
- Mechanism
- Most researchers agree that neck injuries are related to relative motion between head and torso
The debate between stiff and yielding seats
- Need yielding seatback to prevent whiplash in more frequent, minor rear crashes
- Need stiff (rigid) seats for occupant retention in infrequent, severe rear crashes
- Reducing both j and k has resolved the debate between rigid and yielding seats by separately considering seat characteristics for strength and stiffness
Lecture 7 Protection of Child Passengers
Difficulty and easiness
- Difficulty
- Lack of data in injury mechanics
- Large variations in body and age
- Easiness
- May adopt “over protection”
Charateristics
- Relatively large head
- Relatively weak neck
- Childs’ ribs are more flexible than those of adults
Attentions
- Child in rear seat(away from airbag)
- Child mush be properly restrained
- Rear-fracing
Lecture 8 Adaptive Occupant Restraint System
**To provide individualized occupant crash protection to meet current and future challenges **
- Current occupant restraint design aimed for regulation requirements
- New needs and challenges
- Crash protection of diverse and vulnerable road users
- Crash protection of diverse and vulnerable road users
- Vehicle safety under automous driving
- Simulate real accidents
- Adaptive restraint system for individualized protection
- Pre-crash warning can provide ORS with more information about crash and more preparation time
- Reversible ORS can be tuned to optimal configurations prior to imminent crash
- Design space of adaptive restraint system
- Seatbelt pretensioning
- Time to fire
- Pull-in length
- Seatbelt force limiter
- First level limiting
- Second level limiting
- When to switch
- Seatbelt D-ring position
- Airbag inflating/deflating characteristics
- Time to fire
- Mass flow scaling
- Exhausting hole size
- Seat position(a new factor)
- Seatbelt pretensioning
- Optimization results
- For 56km/h
- Head injury reduced for all dummies
- Chest compression largely reduced for small dummies
- Seat position tends to be close to knee bolster for better posture control
- Airbag effect on dummy reduced, help reducing airbag risk
- Seatbelt
- Force limiting level lowered for small dummies for reducing chest injury
- Pretension increased, belt force increased in early stage
- For 40km/h
- Sit farther away from knee bolster, further reducing effect of airbag
- Seatbelt
- Pretension pull-in proportional to dummy size
- Pull-in & 1st level limiting force decrease as dummy gets smaller
- Summary
- Seat position
- In 56 km/h crashes, seat position is proportional to dummy height, close to knee bolster, for posture control
- In 40 km/h crashes, seat position is farther away from knee bolster, for staying away from airbag
- Airbag
- Contact force with dummy is largely reduced
- In low speed crash, airbag hardly contacts with occupant
- Seatbelt
- Greater pretension effect
- Load limiting level is proportional to dummy size
- Seatbelt becomes main restraining device, airbag force is greatly suppressed
- Seat position
- Optimization of restraint system considering Chinese statures
- Airbag mass flow is a main factor to chest injury of small stature and head injury of large stature
- Safety development of autonomous driving vehicles
- Characteristics of future traffic:
- Smart
- efficient
- convenience
- safe
- Connected and autonomous vehicles moving in platoon : high-speed crash of multiple-cars
- Technologies
- pre-crash sensing
- adaptive restraint system
- individualized protection
- Characteristics of future traffic:
- For 56km/h
Lecture 10 Occupant Head Impact Protection
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Background
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Head injury is leading cause of severe injuries and fatalities in passenger car accidents
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upper interior head impact requirements of FMSVSS 201 :
To reduce severe head injuries due to secondary impact with upper interior components
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Countermeasures
- Padded interior to absorb head impact energy and reduce head injury
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Problem
- Padding takes too much interior space
- Should use the least interior space to meet the FMVSS 201 requirements
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Innovative trim – Plastic rib filled with polymer foam
- Goal: early peak and small rebound
- Trim developed through collaboration between supplier and OEM
- Effective protection with minimum padding
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Total stopping distance (EA space)
- Three sources:
- Deformation of padding
- Compression of headform skin
- **Elastic deflection of sheet metal **
- Why elastic sheet metal deflection can absorb (manage) head impact energy
- Answer: the event is over before sheet metal rebounds
- The rebound part has little effect to the HIC calculation
- But stiffness of the elastic structure affects HIC
- Three sources:
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Lecture 11 Pedestrain Impact Protection
- Injury mechanisms
- Head impacts are most life threatening form
- Lower extremity impacts
- Severe knee joint injuries often cause permanent disability
- Account for severe injuries
- Injury sources
- Bumper, hood, and windshield
- Improvements of vehicle front-end structures can reduce
pedestrian injuries
- Styling & packaging affecting pedestrian protection
- Lower extremity impact protection
- Design of vehicle front-end structures (bumper height,
shape and stiffness) greatly affects leg bone fractures
- First contact location (above, at or below knee) affects injury patterns
- The influence of vehicle type on injury severity
- Design of vehicle front-end structures (bumper height,
shape and stiffness) greatly affects leg bone fractures