Simulating Pelvis Kinematics from Belt and Seat Loading in Frontal Car Crash Scenarios: Important Boundary Conditions that Influence the Outcome
Journal article, 2024

Purpose: The risk of submarining during automotive crashes, defined by the lap belt sliding off the pelvis to load the abdomen, is predicted to increase in future autonomous vehicles as greater variation in seating position is enabled. Biofidelic tools are required to efficiently design and evaluate new and/or improved safety systems. This study aims to evaluate the pelvis response sensitivity to variations in boundary conditions that directly influence the pelvis loads, deemed important for the submarining outcome, to facilitate a more precise comparison between finite element human body models (FE-HBMs) and post-mortem human subjects (PMHSs). Methods: A parameter study, using a one-variable-at-a-time analysis (low/high) of belt friction, seat friction, seat stiffness, and (on/off) for added belt bending stiffness, was performed using a state-of-the-art FE-HBM in four different test scenarios; one stationary, two sleds with upright occupant posture, and one sled with reclined occupant posture. Results: In the stationary scenario, both belt friction and belt bending stiffness influenced the belt folding behavior, which consequently affected the belt-to-pelvis angle at submarining. In the sled scenarios, only seat friction was found to influence the pelvis kinematics and submarining outcome, with the most biofidelic response resulting from both the low (0.2) and high (0.5) friction coefficient depending on the scenario. Conclusion: To reduce uncertainty in boundary conditions affecting the external pelvis loads and increase confidence in FE-HBM to PMHS comparisons, it is recommended that future experiments evaluate the PMHS to seat friction coefficient and that new belt modeling methods that accurately capture belt folding when interacting with soft tissues are developed.

Human body model

Finite element analysis

Boundary conditions

Submarining

Pelvis

Author

Erik Brynskog

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

Johan Iraeus

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

Bengt Pipkorn

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

Autoliv AB

Johan Davidsson

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

Annals of Biomedical Engineering

0090-6964 (ISSN) 15739686 (eISSN)

Vol. In Press

Enhancing Female and Male SAFER HBM Torso Injury Prediction

FFI - Strategic Vehicle Research and Innovation (2023-02613), 2024-02-01 -- 2027-01-31.

Pelvis and spine injury predicting models for women and men in a variety of sitting postures in future autonomous cars

FFI - Strategic Vehicle Research and Innovation (2018-04998), 2019-04-01 -- 2022-03-31.

Subject Categories

Applied Mechanics

Other Medical Engineering

Vehicle Engineering

DOI

10.1007/s10439-024-03631-9

More information

Latest update

11/13/2024