Design of Motorcycle Helmets - TRIPP
Transcription
Design of Motorcycle Helmets - TRIPP
Design of Motorcycle Helmets Puneet Mahajan Indian Institute of Technology Delhi INDIA. Helmet Components and Principle Some facts about helmets (from a US study) More than 80 percent of all motorcycle crashes result in injury or death to the motorcyclist. Per mile driven, a motorcyclist is 16 times more likely to die in a crash than an automobile driver. Wearing a motorcycle helmet reduces that risk by almost one-third (29 percent). Wearing a helmet is the single most critical factor in preventing or reducing head injuries among motorcycle drivers and passengers. Some facts about helmets Hurt Report, (1981) First, about half of all serious motorcycle accidents happen when a car pulls in front of a bike in traffic. These accidents typically happen at very low speeds, with a typical impact velocity, after all the braking and skidding, below 40 kmph. Actual crash speeds are slow, but the damage isn't. These are serious, often fatal crashes. Most of these crashes happen very close to home. Some facts about helmets Hurt Report, (1981) The next-biggest group of typical accidents happens at night, often on a weekend, at higher speeds. They are much more likely to involve alcohol, and often take place when a rider goes off the road alone. These two groups of accidents account for almost 75 percent of all serious crashes. So the accident we are most afraid of, and the one we tend to buy our helmets for—crashing at high speeds, out sport riding—is relatively rare. Some facts about helmets (Hurt Report and a similar study in Thailand ) A vast majority of head impacts occur when the rider falls off his bike and simply hits his head on the flat road surface. The energy is proportional to the height from which the rider falls—not his forward speed at the time. Going faster when you fall off does not typically result in your helmet taking a harder hit. 90 % of the head impacts were equal to or less than the force involved in a 2.2 m drop (23 km/hr). 99% of the impacts were at or below the energy of a 3.3 m drop (29 km/hr). A high-speed crash may involve a lot of sliding along the ground, but all modern full-face helmets do an excellent job of protecting you from abrasion. Some facts about helmets Helmets hit a flat asphalt surface (75-85%) Helmets do hit curbs a small percentage of the time, but usually after sliding along on the road first. Some other facts about helmets Helmets don't obscure vision. All helmets provide a field of vision of more than the 140 degree standard that state driver licensing agencies use to identify vision problems. Helmets don't impair hearing. for someone without a helmet, the wind and sound of the engine are very loud, and any other important sounds must be even louder to be heard over all that noise. With a helmet on, surrounding sounds are quieter, but in equal proportions. Technically speaking, the signal to noise ratio stays the same. Visibility. Although black helmets are popular among motorcyclists, they offer the least visibility to motorists. A rider wearing a plain white helmet rather than a black one reduces his or her chance of collision by 24% because it is so much more visible — day or night. Nevertheless, black helmets outsell white ones by 20:1. Sagittal view of Human head and Meninges (Ref. Nucleus Medical art, 2001) Brain Injury Brain basically floats inside the skull, within a bath of cervical-spinal fluid (CSF)and a protective cocoon called the dura. When the skull stops suddenly—as it does when it hits something hard—the brain keeps going, and has its own collision with the inside of the skull. If that collision is too severe, brain injuries such as shearing of the brain tissue bleeding in the brain, or between the brain and the dura, or between the dura and the skull can occur. When the brain is injured internally, bleeding and inflammation make it swell and it presses harder against the inside of the skull and tries to squeeze through any opening, bulging out of eye sockets and oozing down the base of the skull. How does it work ? When the helmet hits the road or a curb, the outer shell stops instantly. Inside, the head keeps going until it collides with the liner. When this happens, the liner brings the head to a gentle stop. Δv F =m Δt more Δt Kinetic energy of head less impact force on the head Strain energy of liner Deformations F F FOAM STEEL (Δx)foam (Δx)steel Force on the head F F Δt Δt (Fav)foam (ΔX) (Fav)steel (ΔX) 2 1 = mv steel 2 2 1 = mv foam 2 ΔX foam (F av ) foam > ΔX steel < (F av ) steel Extended Poly-styrene (EPS) Liner The great thing about EPS is that as it crushes, it absorbs lots of energy at a predictable rate. It doesn't store energy and rebound like a spring, which would be a bad thing because the head would bounce back up, shaking the brain not just once, but twice. EPS actually absorbs the kinetic energy of the moving head, creating a very small amount of heat as the foam collapses. Outer Shell • Prevents penetration of EPS by sharp objects -almost never happens • Shell protects against abrasion when sliding on the road •Absorbs energy • as it flexes in a polycarbonate helmet, •or flexes, crushes and delaminates in a fiberglass composite helmet. •The EPS liner inside the shell is better at absorbing energy than the shell. It absorbs energy by crushing. Helmet Performance and Tests Impact attenuation test - dropping a helmet in a guided fall onto a steel test anvil and measure Acceleration time history from an accelerometer at the headform center of mass. Drop Test Impact sites Four impact sites B (front), P (crown), R (rear), and X (side) IS requires that the peak acceleration of head should be less than 275g and Head Injury Criterion (HIC) should be less than 2400 when the head is dropped with an impact velocity of 7.5m/s. ECE 22:05 has increased the impact velocity to 8.5 m/s Helmet Performance and Tests roll-off test recommends that a helmet may be shifted but must not roll off the head form. dynamic retention test for testing the strap during an abrupt guided fall. The retention system fails if it cannot support the mechanical loads or if the maximum instantaneous deflection of the retention system exceeds 30 mm. chin bar test, a weight is dropped through a guided fall to strike the central portion of the chin bar. The maximum deflection of the chin bar must not exceed a stated distance. shell penetration test, a sharply pointed striker is dropped in a guided fall onto the helmet from a prescribed height. The test striker must not penetrate the helmet or even achieve momentary contact with the head form. Work at IIT Delhi • Ventilation and Computational Fluid Dynamics • Improve air velocities inside the helmet to evaporate sweat without degrading impact behavior • Impact analysis – Explicit Finite Element • Alternate shell materials •Composite shell and Metal foam Ventilation in Helmets • Ventilation in Helmets was studied with wind tunnel experiments and Computational Fluid Dynamics (Fluent) • The Head and Helmet models used were of actual geometry • Methods tried to improve the ventilation • - Providing the grooves and slot in liner foam • - Lifting the helmet by providing foam blocks at few locations Computational Fluid Dynamics Assumptions in CFD analysis • Fluid flow assumed as steady. • The walls were stationary with no slip. • k-ε turbulence model was used. • Symmetry boundary conditions were used at mid plane • Inlet boundary condition was 15.7 m/s velocity and the outlet condition was Outflow. Helmet without grooves & slot Velocity contours in the central plane With normal helmet the gap is ‘zero’ at few locations and there is no space for air to flow Ventilation models Groove Slot Various dimensions of the groove were tried and the slot dimension was fixed at 42mm x 7mm Velocity contours in Helmet - Head With slot at 30 deg. With tangential slot Velocity contours in 42mm x 7mm model Comparison of air velocities in various helmet ventilation models Alternate Designs Four foam blocks were placed by lifting the helmet by 2mm Velocity contours in helmet-head gap with foam blocks (60mm x 20mm) Velocity contours in helmet-head gap Results from CFD study • In the helmet-head gap, air velocities were higher in helmet with slot as compared to the helmet without slot. • With tangential slot, velocities were higher through out the gap compared to the slot at 30 deg. • Grooves of 42mm x 7mm & 14mm x 14mm gave comparable improvement in air velocities Impact Dynamics Helmet testing & standards Impact Test Rig Type Twin-Wire or Monorail Anvil type Flat/ Kerb Impact velocity 7.5 m/s Peak Acceleration 275 g HIC 2400 All the standards measure the shock transmitted through the helmet into the headform by means of an accelerometer mounted at the headform’s center of gravity • Impact analysis done with various Helmet models (LS-DYNA) • For Deformable head model in impact studies, forces, intracranial pressures, and stresses were studied • For rigid head model HIC was calculated Finite Element model of helmet-head in front, side, and oblique impacts Material modeling Outer shell • Prevents the penetration of sharp objects • ABS material was considered for outer shell • Young’s modulus of ABS = 1.7 GPa • Poisson’s ratio = 0.3 • Yield stress = 34.3 MPa • *MAT_PLASTIC_KINEMATIC material model had been • used for ABS shell in LS-DYNATM Liner foam • Inner crushable foam is of EPS 30 mm thick [Ref. Yettram, 1994] Stress/Strain relationship of EPS under quasi-static loading *MAT_CRUSHABLE _FOAM material model had been used for EPS foam in LS-DYNATM Young’s modulus of EPS foam = 18 MPa Poisson’s ratio = 0.05 Yield stress = 0.7 MPa Yield surface and its evolution for EPS are defined by, Yield surface description: f = f ( I 1 , J 2) Hardening formulation: Y = Y 0 + H (e v ) Y t = Y t0 where, Y is the yield stress, Y0 is initial compressive yield stress, Yt is tensile cut off stress and H is strain hardening. Human head model The FE model of Head consists of Skin Skull CSF Brain Tentorium Falx [Ref. Remy Willinger, 2000] Parts in FE model of Head Skin Face Skull CSF Brain Falx Tentorium Measure of Injury If head is assumed rigid - Head Injury criterion Injury Criterion for Deformable Head Applied brain pressure tolerance (ABPT) Intracranial pressure 170 kPa moderate injury > 230 kPa fatal injury. Brain von-Mises shear stress (VMSS) 27 kPa for moderate 39 kPa for severe DAI. Front impact Force on the head with and without helmet Intracranial pressures at coup & contrecoup with & without helmet Deformed shapes of polystyrene foam (7.5m/s velocity) Front impact Oblique impact Force on the head without helmet ventilation at different velocities Force on the head with ventilated helmet at 7.5 m.s-1 velocity Coup & contra-coup pressures at 7.5 m.s-1 velocity von Mises stress in the brain • The maximum is observed on the right side of the brain • Variation in von Mises stresses was observed in different Helmet models • It is lower with 14x14 groove & 48x7 slot helmet and is 18.4 kPa Various biomechanical parameters at 7.5 m/s velocity Intracranial Pressure (N.m-2 ) Force on the helmet (N) Force on the head (N) No ventilation 7441 14mmx 7mm groove Helmet type Von-Mises stress in the brain (kPa) HIC Peak accel. ( in g) 47.4 867 170 774 158 Coup Contra-coup 7230 2.1 x105 -1.19x105 6846 6574 1.87 x105 -1.1 x105 28mm x7mm groove 7363 7058 2.1 x105 -1.2 x105 50.9 868 168 42mm x7mm groove 7739 7364 2.36 x105 -1.28x105 55.6 1051 183 14mmx14mm groove 7057 6862 1.94 x105 -1.15x105 46.1 744 155 14mm x7mm - 3 grooves 7137 6850 1.95 x105 -1.14x105 46.9 691 160 45.7 Side impact Force on the head without helmet ventilation at different velocities Force on the head with ventilated helmet at 7 m.s-1 velocity Various biomechanical parameters at 7.5 m/s velocity Intracranial Pressure (N.m-2 ) Force on the helmet (N) Force on the head (N) No ventilation 10202 14mm x7mm groove Helmet type Von-Mises stress in the brain (kPa) HIC Peak accel. (in g) Coup Contra-coup 9513 2.2 x105 -1.43 x105 63.5 1680 229 10132 9504 2.2 x105 -1.43 x105 62.3 1693 231 28mm x7mm groove 10207 9552 2.2 x105 -1.43 x105 62.1 1701 235 42mm x7mm groove 10074 9384 2.2 x105 -1.43 x105 63.4 1690 234 14mm x14mm groove 10187 9531 2.2 x105 -1.43 x105 62.2 1730 223 14mm x7mm - 3 grooves 10126 9512 2.19 x105 -1.43 x105 63.2 1682 230 Results of Ventilation and Impact studies • The helmet with ventilation was bottomed out at 9m/s velocity where as without ventilation bottomed out at 10m/s • Based on the ventilation and dynamics study, groove with 14mm x 14mm is preferable in helmets. Composite shell • Composite materials apart from ABS/Polycarbonate are used in Motorcycle helmets for outer shell because of high specific strength and stiffness. • Helmets with Composite laminated shells are considered better in minimizing the peak acceleration of the rider. •Polyester resin, which is used as matrix material, reinforced by either Carbon or Kevlar or Glass fibres. • During impact, composites undergo damage (matrix cracking, debonding, fiber breakage) and delamination between plies. • The damage mechanisms provide another mechanism for absorprion of energy. • Investigated the delamination and in-plane damage in Carbon fibre / Epoxy matrix Helmet with 0 /90 plies • Delamination in composite shell was studied by using Cohesive Zone Model • Interface layer of ‘zero thickness’ was modeled with cohesive elements between the composite plies of the outer shell in motorcycle helmet Cohesive Zone Model • Cohesive zone model (CZM) is a fracture mechanics approach to study the interfacial effects in a material • An idealized model with cohesive elements (5,6) between 4-noded bilinear continuum elements (1,2,3,4) was introduced to model the interface between two materials. Variation of traction at the interface • The mechanical response of cohesive interface can be described through a constitutive law relating ‘traction’ and ‘separation’ • The area under the traction – separation curve is the energy absorbed in separation • Traction across the interface reaches maximum at point A then decreases to point B and vanishes when complete decohesion occurs Traction A tc B O δc Separation Damage initiation Damage initiates when the quadratic interaction function involving the nominal stress ratios reaches a value of ‘1’ 2 2 2 ⎛ t n ⎞ ⎛ t s ⎞ ⎛ tt ⎞ ⎜⎜ 0 ⎟⎟ + ⎜⎜ 0 ⎟⎟ + ⎜⎜ 0 ⎟⎟ ⎝ t n ⎠ ⎝ t s ⎠ ⎝ tt ⎠ =1 Damage initiation stresses in Mode-I , II, and III are 57 MPa, 100 MPa, and 100 MPa respectively [Ref. Iannucci , 2006] t 0 n = Damage initiation stress in Mode - I Damage evolution Mixed mode fracture criterion was used for damage evolution G I + G II + G III = G IC G IIC G IIIC f Where, GI G IC = Strain energy in Mode - I = Critical Strain energy in Mode - I Critical energies used for cohesive layer in Mode – I, II, and III are 281 N/m, 900 N/m, and 900 N/m respectively [Ref. Iannucci , 2006] Hashin’s in-plane damage criteria 2 ⎛ σ 11 ⎞ ⎜ ⎟ ⎝ XT ⎠ σ 11C X 2 ⎛ σ 12 ⎞ ⎟⎟ ⎜ ⎝ S 12 ⎠ +⎜ ≥1 ≥1 Fiber tension failure Fiber compression failure C 2 ⎛ σ 22 ⎞ ⎜ ⎟ ⎝ YT ⎠ 2 ⎛ σ 12 ⎞ +⎜ ⎟⎟ ⎜ ⎝ S 12 ⎠ ≥1 Matrix tension failure 2 2 2 ⎡ ⎤ σ 22 ⎢⎛⎜ Y C ⎞⎟ − 1⎥ + ⎛⎜ σ 22 ⎞⎟ + ⎛⎜ σ 12 ⎞⎟ ≥ 1 ⎢ ⎥ Y C ⎢⎜⎝ 2 S 12 ⎟⎠ ⎥ ⎜⎝ 2 S 12 ⎟⎠ ⎜⎝ S 12 ⎟⎠ ⎣ ⎦ Matrix compression failure Impact velocity = 9m/s Delamination zone in the cohesive layer of composite shell Separation of plies Matrix tensile damage Matrix compression damage Energy during impact IE in helmet EPS foam = 67.7 J Composite lamina = 34.4 J Cohesive layer = 0.56 J Force on the head with composite shell Force on the head (with half-model) = 10900N without damage and delamination = 9780N with damage and delamination Due to damage and delamination in the composite shell, force on the head is reduce but is higher compared to ABS shell Force on the head (with full model) = 17750N with ABS shell = 19560N with composite shell Metal foam • Lately, metal foams are being used in crash applications because of its light weight, high strength and energy absorption capabilities. • Metal foams are expensive but much lighter than the Polycarbonate, which commonly used as material for shell. • One application of the Metal foam can be Helmet A constitutive model proposed by Deshpande and Fleck used for Metal foam The yield function Φ is defined by ∧ φ =σ −Y ≤ 0 2 ⎛ ⎞ ⎜σ ⎟ ⎝ ⎠ ∧ ∧ σ = 1 ⎡ ⎢1 + ⎛ α ⎢ ⎜ ⎢⎣ ⎝ 3 ⎞⎥ ⎟⎥ ⎠ ⎥⎦ = equivalent stress Y = Yield stress ∧ R (ε ) = strain hardening ∧ ε 2 [σ ⎤ = equivalent strain +α e 2 2 σ 2 m ] Deformation in top impact at 7.5 m/s velocity Top impact at 15 m/s velocity Experiments Vs prediction from FEA Impact velocity = 7.5 m/s Top impact Front impact Studies with Full-face helmets Front impact , 7.5 m.s-1 velocity , Rigid headform Headform acceleration traces : ABS vs Metal foam shell Helmet impact characteristics With Rigid headform Outer shell Mass (kg) Peak Acceleration (in g) HIC ABS 0.938 208 1510 MF-1 0.829 210 1773 MF-2 0.497 202 1706 MF-3 0.248 160 1229 Front impact , 7.5 m.s-1 velocity , Deformable head Deformation in helmet with 150 kg/m3 density Metal foam Al foam EPS foam Head Resultant force : ABS vs Metal foam shell Variation of kinetic energy (KE) and internal energy (IE) in the outer shell ABS shell Metal foam shell Energy absorbed by ABS is almost same as its initial kinetic energy (26 J). The low-density Al foam absorbed more energy than its own kinetic energy and reduced the forces on the head The initial kinetic energy of Metal foam (density = 150 kg/m3) shell is 7J but it absorbed 16J The energy absorption in EPS foam is same in all the helmets von Mises stresses in the brain Among all helmets, the von Mises stress in the brain is lower in 150 kg/m3 density Metal foam helmet and is 17.7 kPa Front impact , 10 m.s-1 velocity , Deformable head Resultant force : ABS vs Metal foam shell Top impact Resultant force : ABS vs Metal foam shell Force on the head = 13913 N with ABS helmet = 13900 N with MF (500 kg/m3) = 11500 N with MF (150 kg/m3) CONCLUSIONS Ventilation studies 9 Various ventilation models in helmets were investigated 9 The helmet with ventilation was crushed at 9m/s velocity where as without ventilation it crushed at 10m/s 9 Pressure and stresses in the brain were investigated and found not to change significantly due to the presence of grooves in the helmet Composite shell studies 9 Delamination between the plies was not observed at low impact velocities 9 Matrix tensile and compressive damage were observed at 7.5 m/s and 9.0 m/s velocities 9 2% energy was absorbed by the cohesive layer at 9m/s velocity 9 Composite shell didn’t absorb much energy compared to ABS shell Metal foam shell studies 9 Experiments were performed on open-face helmets 9 Impact analysis with Metal foam shell was carried out and found the lower contact forces on the head compared to ABS shell. 9 The weight of the shell is reduced by 73% with low-density metal foam compared to ABS 9 von Mises stress in the brain is lower with metal foam. Thank You. X-velocity contours within the gap of 10mm Max. velocity = 8.0m/s Injury Scale and head injury Abbreviated Injury Scale, or AIS, to describe how severely a patient is hurt when they come into a trauma facility. AIS 1 = Minor AIS 2 = Moderate AIS 3 = Serious AIS 4 = Severe AIS 5 = Critical AIS 6 = Unsurvivable Acceleration of 200 g - 250 g generally corresponds to a head injury of AIS 4 250 g - 300 g corresponds to AIS 5 > 300g corresponds to AIS 6. Wayne State Tolerance Curve exposing a human head to a force over 200 Gs for more than 2 milliseconds is what medical experts refer to as "bad.“ Its not going to kill you but can cause Traumatic Brain Injury leading to disabilities. At high speed tests show that the EPS had cracked and compressed at the impact sites without bottoming. Composite shell • Composite materials are used in Motorcycle helmets for outer shell because of high specific strength and stiffness. • Helmets with Composite laminated shells are considered better in minimizing the peak acceleration of the rider. •Polyester resin, which is used as matrix material, reinforced by either Carbon or Kevlar or Glass fibres. • Composite materials exhibit a significant number of failure modes in impact. Various biomechanical parameters in oblique impact at 7m.s-1 velocity Force on the helmet (N) Force on the head (N) 7248 Intracranial Pressure (N.m-2 ) Coup Contra-coup Von-Mises stress in the brain (kPa) 6339 1.76 x105 -1.57 x105 33.9 0.361 1524 198 7663 6657 1.81 x105 -1.56 x105 33.5 0.367 1195 184 28x7 groove 7596 6474 1.82x105 -1.56 x105 33.3 0.366 1264 177 42x7 groove 7483 6506 1.78 x105 -1.55 x105 33.6 0.366 1314 201 14x14 groove 7467 6502 1.85 x105 -1.57 x105 33.5 0.366 1550 199 14x7 - 3 grooves 8043 6691 2.17 x105 -1.43 x105 35.4 0.363 - - Helmet type No ventilation 14x7 groove Max. strain in brain HIC Peak accel. (in g)