Occupant Neck Muscle Modelling in Rear-End Crashes
Doktorsavhandling, 2022

The ultimate goal of the present research is to incorporate active and passive neck muscle effects in a female Finite Element (FE) Human Body Model (HBM). The application of interest is Whiplash Associated Disorders (WAD), which can occur in a low-speed rear-end impact. Two reflex mechanisms, the Vestibulocollic reflex (VCR) and the Cervicocollic reflex (CCR), are integral to maintaining head orientation. Therefore, active muscle modelling in HBMs should address the behaviour of these reflex mechanisms. Female FE HBMs are the focus of the present thesis because of their higher risk of sustaining WAD than males. This model should reproduce kinematics that can be used for global and local tissue injury prediction of WAD. The present thesis was arranged to address the main objective systematically and consists of six studies addressing five research questions. Two human body models representing the 50th percentile population, the VIVA OpenHBM and VIVA+ HBM, were used. The model was developed with and benchmarked against volunteer test data. Based on the collective studies in this thesis, the isolated head-neck model can be used to develop an active muscle controller. A simple, single-link approach was used to design a Proportional-Derivative (PD) controller called Angular Positioned Feedback (APF). This simple controller was convenient to implement and calibrate with available experimental data. Furthermore, reliable parameter identification, such as active muscle controller gains, were obtained via optimization using both head and cervical vertebral kinematics as objectives. A parameter study of different control strategies confirmed that the APF control strategy, combined with parallel damping elements (PDE), was the most effective for recreating volunteer kinematic responses compared to the model with only passive elements, particularly when impact severity was varied. Real-world collision data was used to evaluate the model’s usefulness using injury outcome data for known collision severities. The inclusion of neck muscle responses considerably influenced the cervical vertebral kinematics but only slightly influenced head kinematics before the rebound phase, depending on the head-to-headrest offset. Consequently, a slight difference in global kinematic-based injury criteria such as Neck Injury Criteria (NIC) was observed between a model with and without neck muscle responses. In contrast, significant differences between the two groups were observed for local, tissue-based, whiplash injury prediction. Hypotheses, such as Aldman pressure, require cervical spine kinematics and place higher requirements on the model’s performance. This analysis revealed the need for both global-based injury criteria and local, tissue level analysis to understand how WAD occur. Therefore, whiplash injury prediction would be more reliable using a model with the APF control strategy combined with PDE developed herein, than a model without active neck muscle responses. The FE HBMs with neck muscle responses have been developed and validated for low-speed rear-end impact and WAD analyses. The models have been shown to be robust and able to replicate volunteer head-neck kinematics.

Active Neck Muscle Responses

Finite Element

Whiplash Associated Disorders

Female

Human Body Model

Room Omega - Building Jupiter, Campus Lindholmen, Hörselgången 5, Gothenburg
Opponent: Professor Duane Cronin, Ph.D., PEng, Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Trauma Biomechanics and Injury Prevention, Director of the Impact Mechanics and Material Characterization Lab, Mechanical And Mechatronics Engineering, University of Waterloo, Canada

Författare

I Putu Alit Putra

Chalmers, Mekanik och maritima vetenskaper, Fordonssäkerhet

Comparison of control strategies for the cervical muscles of an average female head-neck finite element model

Traffic Injury Prevention,; Vol. 20(2019)p. S116-S122

Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift

Optimization of Female Head–Neck Model with Active Reflexive Cervical Muscles in Low Severity Rear Impact Collisions

Annals of Biomedical Engineering,; Vol. 49(2021)p. 115-128

Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift

Analysis of control strategies for VIVA OpenHBM with active refexive neck muscles

Biomechanics and Modeling in Mechanobiology,; (2022)

Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift

Finite element human body models with active reflexive muscles suitable for sex based whiplash injury prediction

Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology,; Vol. 10(2022)

Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift

I Putu A. Putra, Johan Iraeus, Hua-Dong Yao, Mats Y. Svensson, Anders Kullgren, Robert Thomson - The Role of Neck Muscle Responses to the Whiplash Injuries based on Accident Reconstruction Simulation using Real-World Accident Pulses - Manuscript to be submitted to a Journal

Injuries in the neck, commonly known as whiplash injuries or Whiplash Associated Disorders (WAD), are prevalent worldwide. Whiplash injuries are most often reported in low-speed rear-end car crashes. Women have been shown to have a higher risk of experiencing whiplash injuries than men. However, there is no firm conclusion of why women tend to have a higher susceptibility to whiplash injuries than men. During low-speed rear-end crashes, our reflex mechanisms trigger muscle activity in the neck. Due to their significant volume, neck muscles could influence the risk of whiplash injuries. How muscles affect the risk of whiplash injuries is still unclear and not fully understood. Reflex mechanisms were investigated in the present thesis to better understand how neck muscle responses influence whiplash injuries. A computer model was developed to represent an average female with neck muscle responses. This knowledge was even implemented in an average male computer model. Based on the collective studies in this thesis, it was found that the developed models can replicate the head and neck motion of female (and even male) occupants during low-speed rear-end car crashes. Whiplash injury prediction could be more reliable using these models. Consequently, the results of this research can provide clues to understand why women have a higher risk in whiplash injuries than males.

Virtual Vehicle Safety Assessment Step 2: Open Source Human Body Models and Crash Testing (Viva II)

VINNOVA (2016-03353), 2017-01-01 -- 2019-06-30.

Open Access Virtual Testing Protocols for Enhanced Road User Safety (VIRTUAL)

Europeiska kommissionen (EU) (EC/H2020/768960), 2018-06-01 -- 2022-05-31.

Ämneskategorier

Maskinteknik

Annan teknik

Medicinteknik

Farkostteknik

Styrkeområden

Transport

Infrastruktur

C3SE (Chalmers Centre for Computational Science and Engineering)

ISBN

978-91-7905-754-1

Doktorsavhandlingar vid Chalmers tekniska högskola. Ny serie: 5220

Utgivare

Chalmers

Room Omega - Building Jupiter, Campus Lindholmen, Hörselgången 5, Gothenburg

Online

Opponent: Professor Duane Cronin, Ph.D., PEng, Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Trauma Biomechanics and Injury Prevention, Director of the Impact Mechanics and Material Characterization Lab, Mechanical And Mechatronics Engineering, University of Waterloo, Canada

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2023-11-13