This application is based upon and claims the benefit of priority of Japanese Patent Applications No. 2004-003191 filed on Jan. 8, 2004 and No. 2004-230928 filed on Aug. 6, 2004, the content of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to a colliding obstacle detection apparatus for a vehicle, which is especially suitable for protecting a pedestrian colliding with the vehicle.
A collision detector, which detects a colliding obstacle such as a pedestrian, is conventionally used for activating a colliding obstacle protector such as a colliding pedestrian protector located on a vehicle. A usage of an output signal outputted from the collision detector prevents the colliding obstacle protector from erroneous operation. In a case that the collision detector has a function to identify pedestrians among the colliding obstacles, the pedestrian protector does not operate in vain for the colliding obstacles other than pedestrians.
A colliding load sensor or a capacitance sensor conventionally implements the above collision detector. To detect pedestrians, these sensors are conventionally located on a front face of a front bumper so as to detect proximity of a colliding obstacle by a fluctuation of a colliding load or a grounded capacitance in front of the vehicle. For example, JP2000-326808A discloses to detect a collision occurrence and to identify a classification of the colliding obstacle by the fluctuation of the capacitance. JP11-028994A discloses to detect a collision occurrence and to identify the classification of the colliding obstacle by using a load sensor (also called as “colliding load sensor”) detecting impact acting on the vehicle body at the collision.
A hood-lifting mechanism or a pedestrian airbag conventionally implements the above colliding pedestrian protector. JP2001-39242A discloses to comprise below the front bumper a pedestrian bumper extendable ahead of the front bumper so as to make the colliding pedestrian fall onto the hood of the vehicle.
However, some experiments raised the following issues in the above conventional collision detectors for protecting colliding pedestrian.
First, in the above conventional example comprising on the front face of the front bumper the colliding load sensor implemented by a pressure sensor, the rigidity of a bumper cover and a bumper absorber constituting the element of the front bumper mechanism is small, and the uniformity of the rigidity thereof is also small. Thus, the colliding load generated by the colliding pedestrian varies within the side-to-side direction thereof, causing difficulty in distinguishing whether the colliding obstacle is a pedestrian or other obstacles. To decrease the variety of the colliding load within the front bumper at the pedestrian collision, it is necessary to increase the rigidity and the uniformity of the front bumper. However, this is difficult because the rigidity of the front bumper is set mainly to absorb the colliding impact.
Second, in the above conventional example comprising on the front face of the front bumper the capacitance sensor, which has a plate electrode of a grounded capacitor vertically arranged on the front face of the front bumper, to detect the grounded capacitance in front of the vehicle (hereinafter referred to as “front grounded capacitance”). The electrode has a large area and arranged close to the body of the vehicle, so as to make an issue that the grounded capacitance against the body of the vehicle (hereinafter referred to as “rear grounded capacitance”) also becomes quite large. The rear and the front grounded capacitances are arranged in parallel to each other in an equivalent circuit of the capacitance sensor. Thus, even when the front grounded capacitance fluctuates by a colliding or proximate obstacle, the potential fluctuation in the electrode is small, because the rear grounded capacitance is large. This causes an issue to decrease a pedestrian-detecting sensitivity by a proximate pedestrian, and to make it hard to identify the pedestrian with high accuracy.
Third, it is necessary to accomplish as fast as possible to detect a collision and to identify the classification of the colliding obstacle, to spare a mechanical operating time from the collision detection to an accomplishment of operating the colliding obstacle detector. However, the colliding load sensor does not start the operation thereof until a colliding obstacle collides with the front bumper. The capacitance sensor also cannot identify a colliding obstacle until a colliding obstacle comes quite close to the front bumper because of the above issue of the detection accuracy. Thus, the time is very limited for operating the colliding obstacle protector, so that it becomes necessary to operate the colliding obstacle protector fast. This increases a mechanical complexity and the manufacturing cost of the colliding obstacle protector.
Further, the difference between the grounded capacitances of the pedestrian (or, a human body) and the metallic obstacle is small, and the output gradient of the sensor when detecting the former is in same directions as that when detecting the latter. These cause an issue of making it difficult to identify a human body from some shape and/or kind of metallic obstacles. At the same time, these conventional examples detect a collision erroneously even when a human body just touches or passing nearby the front bumper not colliding thereto.
Furthermore, it is hard for the colliding load sensor to identify from a human body the colliding obstacle having a mass, rigidity or a frictional coefficient to road surface close to those of the human body, such as a signboard and a fence having weight close to that of human body.
An object of the present invention is to provide a colliding obstacle detection apparatus for a vehicle, which can detect accurately and rapidly a collision with a forward obstacle, especially with a forward pedestrian.
To achieve the above object, a colliding obstacle detection apparatus according to the present invention comprises a pedestrian bumper supported below a front bumper of the vehicle by a body of the vehicle. The front end of the pedestrian bumper vertically aligns with or extending ahead of that of the front bumper.
The colliding obstacle detection apparatus further comprises at least one collision detector located on the pedestrian bumper. The at least one collision detector detects one of a collision of the pedestrian bumper with an obstacle, and a presence of the obstacle in a close proximity to the pedestrian bumper. The colliding obstacle detection apparatus further comprises a control circuit determining whether the collision has actually occurred based on a detection signal outputted by the at least one collision detector. When the control circuit determines that the collision has actually occurred, the circuit activates a colliding obstacle protector for protecting the obstacle, especially a pedestrian.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will be appreciated, as well as methods of operation and the function of the related parts, from a study of the following detailed description, the appended claims, and the drawings, all of which form a part of this application. In the drawings:
Thus, when a metallic body comes close to the coil 11 so that eddy currents flows therein, the impedance of the coil 11 decreases and a voltage drop therein is also decreases. The voltage between both ends of the coil 11 can be used an output voltage Vo. A resistor can implement the impedance device 14, for example. It is desirable that the electricity supply circuit 12 is a constant current supply circuit so that the output voltage Vo is proportionate to the impedance of the coil 11.
The judgment circuit 2 rectifies the output voltage Vo, compares that with a threshold voltage Vth and outputs the result. In the case that the judgment circuit 2 determines the output voltage Vo is smaller than the threshold voltage Vth, the operation circuit 3 inhibits commonly-known pedestrian protectors from operation such as an airbag located on the hood and a hood-lift mechanism. This is because the judgment circuit 2 has determined that the obstacle is a metallic one, not a pedestrian. The pedestrian does not make the impedance of the coil 11 decrease so much, so that the judgment circuit 2 can identify pedestrians from metallic obstacles with high accuracy.
It is desirable that the pedestrian bumper comprises another collision detector 1 detecting collision with or proximity to obstacles including pedestrians, which a colliding load sensor and/or an ultrasonic sensor can implement. The colliding load sensor is, for example, a sheet-shaped pressure sensor affixed on the front face of the bumper plate and detecting a colliding load. The ultrasonic sensor irradiates an ultrasonic wave ahead of the bumper plate and receives the reflected wave, and detects a presence of and a distance to an obstacle in front of and close to the bumper plate based on an intensity of the reflected wave and a time from the irradiation to the reception.
A piezoelectric plastic film is suitable for these sheet-shaped pressure sensor or ultrasonic sensor with a pair of electrodes at both surfaces thereof, whose thickness increases and decreases according to the voltage applied thereto, and which generates voltages according to the pressure applied thereto.
A capacitance sensor shown in
In
Thus, when a conductor (a metallic obstacle or a human body) comes close to the plate electrode 15 being in equivalent contact with ground, the capacitance between the conductor and the electrode 15 increases and the voltage drop thereof decreases, which can be set as the output voltage Vo. A resistor implements the impedance device 14, for example . A constant current supply circuit is suitable for the power supply circuit 12, which can output an output voltage Vo generally inversely proportional to the grounded capacitance of the electrode 15.
The judgment circuit 2 rectifies the output current Vo, compares that with a threshold voltage level Vth and outputs the result. In the case that the judgment circuit 2 determines the output voltage Vo is smaller than the threshold voltage Vth, the operation circuit 3 activates commonly-known pedestrian protectors such as an airbag installed on the hood and a hood-lift mechanism. This is because the colliding obstacle is determined to be a human body (including a metallic obstacle having generally a same size as that of human body).
By comprising both of the sensors shown in
The sensors shown in
An AC power supply 13 applies an electrode 15 an alternate voltage via an impedance device 14 and a coil 11. A resistor 16 is arranged in parallel with the coil 11, and a resistor 18 is arranged in parallel with the capacitor 17 which are grounded. The capacitor 17 has a grounded capacitance Cx in the electrode 15. A bumper plate of the pedestrian bumper described later comprises the coil 11 and the electrode 15. The resistors 16 and 17, which are for adjusting the output voltage Vo, are not always necessary.
Thus, as described above, the output voltage Vo increases when a metallic obstacle comes close and decreases when a pedestrian comes close. Accordingly, substantially one sensor can rapidly detect that a pedestrian or a metallic obstacle comes close and distinguish between the proximate pedestrian and metallic obstacle.
This example incorporates a dummy coil 11′, a dummy capacitor 17′, dummy resistors 16′ and 18′ and a differential amplifier 19 into the impedance sensor shown in
It is desirable to set the impedances of the dummy coil 11′ and of the dummy capacitor 17′ in consideration of the inductance and the eddy current (constituent of the resistance) of the detector coil 11 much influenced by the vehicle body located just behind the pedestrian bumper because the magnetic flux generated by the coil 11 comes in linkage with and flows therein, and the grounded capacitance of the electrode 15 enlarged by the vehicle body which is a grounded metallic body. The advantage of this circuit is in the compensation of impedance fluctuation caused by the exothermic dummy coil 11′.
The sensor 30 located on the pedestrian bumper 20 comprises a piezoelectric plastic film 31 affixed on the front face of the bumper plate 21 and a pair of electrode layers 32 and 33 laminated on the both sides thereof. The bumper plate 21 can replace one of the electrode layers 33 affixed on the bumper plate side if the bumper plate is metallic one. The collision detector shown in
The piezoelectric plastic film 31 expands and shrinks to emit ultrasonic waves in front of the vehicle by applying alternate voltage between the electrode layers 32 and 33 of the sensor 30. This is substantially based on the same principle as conventional film speaker. When an obstacle is present in front of the vehicle, the obstacle reflects the emitted ultrasonic wave, and the reflected ultrasonic wave makes the piezoelectric plastic film 31 expands and shrinks, so as to generate a voltage having a frequency of the ultrasonic wave between the electrode layers 32 and 33. The intensity of the reflected ultrasonic wave forms a signal voltage according thereto, by extracting the band of the frequency in the ultrasonic wave, and rectifying and integrating the extracted ultrasonic wave.
In addition to detecting the presence of the colliding obstacle by the intensity of the reflected ultrasonic wave, the distance to the obstacle may be measured by the time between the emission and the reception of the ultrasonic wave. As conventionally known, a ultrasonic wave emitter and a pair of ultrasonic wave receptors can be detect the distance to the colliding obstacle and the position in a side-to-side direction thereof by using triangulation techniques. A ceramic piezoelectric device or a magnetostrictive device may be used instead of the piezoelectric plastic film 31.
Only the ultrasonic sensor cannot distinguish between pedestrian and other colliding obstacle. A combined use of the ultrasonic sensor and the sensors shown in
It merits attention that the piezoelectric sensor 30 detects a collision occurrence and takes readings of a waveform of a colliding load. The load detection sensor also serves as the above ultrasonic sensor 30 by imposing the load detection sensor an alternate voltage. The AC power supplying current to the impedance sensor shown in FIGS. 2 to 4 can also supply current to the ultrasonic sensor.
The electrode layer 32 of the sensor 30 may do double duty of itself and the electrode plate 15 shown in
The pedestrian bumper 20 implemented by an unextendable pedestrian bumper is described referring to
On the front face of the vehicle body 100 is located a front bumper 50 comprising a bumper cover 51 and a bumper absorber 53 surrounded by the bumper cover 51. The bumper absorber 52 is located on a front face of the bumper reinforcement 53. The bumper reinforcement 53 is affixed on front ends of the side members 54.
Below the front bumper 50, as shown in
On the front face of the bumper plate 32 is located a impedance sensor 1 shown in
The colliding load sensor 200 detects the fluctuation of the resistance according to the stress applied onto the film colliding load sensor 200 by the deformation of the bumper plate 21 at a collision. Common piezoelectric materials, whose resistance changes according to the stress applied thereto, can implement the colliding load sensor 200. The collision detection sensor 200 may be located on the front face of the bumper plate 21. A pressure sensor described in the first embodiment may implement the colliding load sensor 200.
The control unit 70 determines whether a pedestrian collides with the vehicle in traveling within a predetermined velocity detected by a velocity sensor 40 detecting the rotational frequency of the wheel 41, and controls the operation of the pedestrian protector based on the result of the decision. The control unit 700 inhibits the pedestrian protector from operation when the vehicle velocity is not within the predetermined range.
The front ends of the hood 80, the front bumper 50 and the bumper plate 21 of pedestrian bumper 20 are located generally on the same line (shown in a chain line in
Another embodiment of the present colliding obstacle detection apparatus will be described hereinafter referring to
On front face of the vehicle body 100 is provided front bumper 50 comprising a bumper cover 51 and a bumper absorber 52 covered with the bumper 51. The bumper absorber 52 is located in front of a bumper reinforcement 53. The bumper reinforcement 53 is fixed at the front end portion of the side members 54.
As shown in
On each of a front and a rear faces of the bumper plate 21 are respectively installed an impedance sensors 1 shown in
The sheet colliding load sensor 200 detects the resistance variety according to the stress applied thereto by the deformation of the bumper plate 21 at a collision. A conventional piezoelectric sheet material implements the colliding load sensor 200. It is reasonable that the colliding load sensor 200 may be installed on the front face of the bumper plate 200, and the pressure sensor described in the first embodiment may implement the colliding load sensor 200.
As shown in
The third embodiment is described referring to
In the first embodiment, the number of the impedance sensor 1 and/or that of the piezoelectric sheet sensor 30 may be plural to be arranged on the front face of the bumper plate 21 of the pedestrian bumper 20. The drawing thereof is not shown in the Figs. The same types of sensors align in a side-to-side direction on the bumper plate 21 and output signals detected respectively. Thus, it becomes possible to detect the colliding position in the side-to-side direction.
In each of the above embodiments, each of the sensors is located on the bumper plate 21 of the pedestrian bumper 20 or detects the status change of the bumper plate 21 at a collision. Instead, it is possible to locate on the bumper plate 21 or to use for detecting the status change thereof at least one kind of the sensors, and to locate on another portion such as front bumper at least one kind of the sensors.
In this embodiment, as shown in
This description of the invention is merely exemplary in nature and, thus, variations that do not depart from the gist of the invention are intended to be within the scope of the invention. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2004-3191 | Jan 2004 | JP | national |
2004-230928 | Aug 2004 | JP | national |