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考虑驾乘人员多样性和碰撞前姿势的约束系统。

Restraint systems considering occupant diversity and pre-crash posture.

作者信息

Boyle Kyle, Fanta Abeselom, Reed Matthew P, Fischer Kurt, Smith Alex, Adler Angelo, Hu Jingwen

机构信息

Biosciences Group, University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute, Ann Arbor, Michigan.

Passive Safety Systems, ZF Group, Washington, Michigan.

出版信息

Traffic Inj Prev. 2020 Oct 12;21(sup1):S31-S36. doi: 10.1080/15389588.2021.1895989. Epub 2021 Mar 12.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Use volunteer data and parametric finite element (FE) human body models to investigate how restraint systems can be designed to adapt to a diverse population and pre-crash posture changes induced by active safety features.

METHODS

Four FE human models were generated by morphing the midsize male GHBMC simplified model into geometries representing a midsize male, midsize female, short obese female (BMI 40 kg/m), and large obese male (BMI 40 kg/m) based on statistical skeleton and body shape geometry models. Each human model was positioned in a generic vehicle driver environment using two occupant pre-crash postures based on volunteer test results including one resulting from 1-g abrupt braking events. Improved restraint designs were manually developed for each occupant model in a 56 km/h frontal crash condition by adding a knee airbag, adjusting the shoulder belt load limit, steering column force, and driver airbag properties (tethers, inflation, and vent size). The improved designs were then tested at both pre-crash postures. Injury risks for the head, neck, chest, and lower extremities were analyzed.

RESULTS

Human size and shape dominated the occupant injury measures, while the pre-crash-braking induced posture had minimal effects. Some of the safety concerns observed for large occupants include head strike-through the airbag and a conflict between head and chest injuries, which were mitigated by a stiffer restraint system with properly-tuned driver airbag. Chest injuries were a prominent safety concern for female occupants, mitigated by a softer seatbelt and smaller airbag size near the chest. Obese occupants exhibited a higher likelihood of lower extremity injuries indicating a need for a knee airbag. A diverse set of improved restraint designs were effective in lowering injury risks, indicating that restraint adaptability is necessary for accounting for occupant diversity.

CONCLUSIONS

This study investigated the effects of occupant size and shape variability, posture, and restraint design on injury risk for high-speed frontal crashes. More forward initial postures due to active safety features may decrease head, neck, and lower extremity injury risk, but may also increase chest injury risk. Safety concerns observed for large occupants include head strike-through and a conflict between head and chest injuries. Obese occupants had higher knee-thigh-hip injury risk. New restraints that adapt to occupant size and body shape may improve crash safety for all occupants. Further investigation is needed to confirm and extend the findings of this study.

摘要

目的

利用志愿者数据和参数化有限元(FE)人体模型,研究如何设计约束系统以适应不同人群以及主动安全功能引起的碰撞前姿势变化。

方法

通过将中型男性GHBMC简化模型变形为基于统计骨骼和身体形状几何模型的代表中型男性、中型女性、矮胖女性(BMI 40 kg/m²)和高大肥胖男性(BMI 40 kg/m²)的几何形状,生成了四个有限元人体模型。根据志愿者测试结果,使用两种碰撞前乘员姿势将每个人体模型放置在通用车辆驾驶员环境中,其中一种姿势是由1g突然制动事件导致的。在56 km/h正面碰撞条件下,通过添加膝部安全气囊、调整肩带负载限制、转向柱力和驾驶员安全气囊特性(系绳、充气和排气口尺寸),为每个乘员模型手动开发了改进的约束设计。然后在两种碰撞前姿势下对改进设计进行测试。分析了头部、颈部、胸部和下肢的受伤风险。

结果

人体尺寸和形状主导了乘员受伤指标,而碰撞前制动引起的姿势影响最小。在高大乘员中观察到的一些安全问题包括头部穿过安全气囊以及头部和胸部受伤之间的冲突,通过具有适当调整的驾驶员安全气囊的更坚固约束系统可以减轻这些问题。胸部受伤是女性乘员的一个突出安全问题,通过更柔软的安全带和胸部附近较小的安全气囊尺寸可以减轻。肥胖乘员下肢受伤的可能性更高,这表明需要膝部安全气囊。一系列不同的改进约束设计有效地降低了受伤风险,表明约束适应性对于考虑乘员多样性是必要的。

结论

本研究调查了乘员尺寸和形状变异性、姿势以及约束设计对高速正面碰撞受伤风险的影响。由于主动安全功能导致的更靠前的初始姿势可能会降低头部、颈部和下肢受伤风险,但也可能增加胸部受伤风险。在高大乘员中观察到的安全问题包括头部穿过和头部与胸部受伤之间的冲突。肥胖乘员膝部 - 大腿 - 髋部受伤风险更高。适应乘员尺寸和身体形状的新约束可能会提高所有乘员的碰撞安全性。需要进一步研究来确认和扩展本研究的结果。

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