Repositioning forward-leaning passengers by seatbelt pre-pretensioning
Journal article, 2023

Objective:
The study determined the seatbelt pre-pretensioner force needed and the time required to reposition average male front-seat passengers from forward-leaning to upright using finite element simulations of the Active SAFER Human Body Model (Active SHBM).
Methods:
The Active SHBM was positioned in an initial forward-leaning position (29° forward from upright) on a deformable vehicle seat. A pre-pretensioner was modeled as a pre-loaded spring and its ability to reposition the forward-leaning Active SHBM to an upright position was simulated for twenty-four different pre-crash conditions. Four parameters were varied: (1) Automated Emergency Braking (AEB) active with 11 m/s2 or no AEB, (2) type of seatbelt system: Belt-In-Seat or B-pillar, (3) pre-pretensioner activation time (200 ms before, 100 ms before, or at the same time as AEB ramp-up), and (4) pre-pretensioner force (200 N, 300 N, 400 N, 600 N). The first thoracic vertebra fore-aft (T1 X) trajectories were compared against a reference upright position to determine the force and time needed to reposition and the effectiveness of repositioning in the different conditions.
Results:
The lowest force enabling repositioning in all simulations was 400 N (no AEB, Belt-In-Seat). It took about 350 ms. In the presence of AEB, activating the pre-pretensioner 200 ms before AEB and using 600 N pre-pretensioner force was needed for repositioning (taking 200 ms with Belt-In-Seat and 260 ms with B-pillar installations). Repositioning was faster and thus more effective with the Belt-In-Seat seatbelt in all simulations.
Conclusions:
All four parameters (presence of AEB, type of seatbelt system, pre-pretensioner activation time and force) affected the repositioning ability and time required. Far from all combinations repositioned a forward-leaning average male occupant model, but those found to be effective and fast appear as a feasible option for vehicle safety systems to reposition out-of-position occupants during pre-crash events.

motorized seatbelt

out-of-position

safety

Human body model

car occupant

Author

Ekant Mishra

Autoliv AB

K. Mroz

Autoliv AB

Nils Lübbe

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Vehicle Safety

Autoliv AB

Traffic Injury Prevention

1538-9588 (ISSN) 1538-957X (eISSN)

Vol. 24 8 716-721

Subject Categories

Other Mechanical Engineering

Vehicle Engineering

Areas of Advance

Transport

DOI

10.1080/15389588.2023.2239408

PubMed

37676070

More information

Latest update

3/7/2024 9