TORSO DEFORMATION IN FRONTAL SLED TESTS: COMPARISION BETWEEN THOR NT, THOR NT WITH THE CHALMERS SD-1 SHOULDER, AND PMHS
Paper in proceeding, 2010
This study compares the thoracic deformation response of the 50th percentile male THOR NT
frontal crash dummy and the response of the THOR modified with the SD-1 shoulder (THOR SD-1)
relative to the thoracic response of eight 50th percentile male PMHS. The prototype Chalmers
University SD-1 shoulder was designed to be more human-like in terms of geometry and range of
motion in comparison to the standard THOR NT shoulder. The dummies and PMHS were restrained
by a three-point restraint in a driver-side configuration and were subjected to a simulated 40 km/h
frontal crash. The most prominent difference between the responses of the dummies and PMHS
involved motion of the lower right anterior ribcage measurement site that is the farthest lateral
distance from the diagonal shoulder belt. During the impact event, this site moved substantially
anteriorly and away from the spine for the PMHS. The PMHS lower right “bulge out” behavior is
believed to be caused by inertial loading of the ribcage, underlying organs, and soft tissue overlying
the torso. The THOR SD-1 shoulder altered the shoulder belt position relative to the thoracic
deflection measurement sites resulting in a different distribution of deformation for the upper
measurement sites although the average upper site deformation was similar to that recorded for the
standard THOR shoulder.
Cadavers
Shoulder
Frontal Impacts
Dummies
Thorax deformations