1. Field
The present invention relates to a harness safety system and in particular to such a system arranged to minimise injury in the event of a fall arrest situation.
2. State of the Art
Suspension trauma, also known as harness hang syndrome (HHS), is an effect which occurs when the human body is held upright without any movement for a period of time. If the person is strapped into a harness or tied to an upright object they will eventually suffer the Central Ischemic Response (commonly known as fainting). If one faints but remains vertical, one risks death due to one's brain not receiving the oxygen it requires. People at risk of suspension trauma include people using industrial harnesses (fall arrest systems, abseiling systems), people using harnesses for sporting purposes (caving, climbing, parachuting, etc).
The effect is exacerbated and severe injury and even death can result from the instantaneous tightening of the harness in fall arrest situations as the fall victims weight is taken by a safety line attached to the harness. The harness tightens typically across the fall victim's chest and groin area cutting into the flesh and preventing blood circulation.
An improved arrangement has now been devised.
According to the present invention, there is provided a harness safety system comprising energy absorbing material that exhibits a change in physical properties at different applied strain rates.
Shear thickening materials or dilatants exhibit a change in physical properties at different applied strain rates, and are referred to in the prior art such as EP1458254. Such materials may viscously flow at low rates of deformation but at an elevated rate of deformation undergo a substantial increase in viscosity. EP1458254 describes how a self supporting composite having such properties may be arrived at. WO2005/000966 also describes energy absorbing composite polymers having such or similar properties.
It is preferred that the harness is provided with one or more protection zones of the energy absorbing material.
As a potential alternative the harness may incorporate the energy absorbing material substantially throughout.
It is preferred that the energy absorbing material is more conformable, relaxed or resilient at lower applied strain rates and less conformable, relaxed or resilient at higher applied strain rates (that is, it is preferred that the energy absorbing material is more rigid at higher applied strain rates).
Beneficially, as a result of a sudden impact or applied stress the material becomes substantially rigid.
It is preferred that, as a result of a sudden impact or applied stress or pressure event the energy absorbing material becomes substantially rigid, changing to a less rigid, more resilient, relaxed or conformable state after a elapsing of a time period following the sudden impact or applied stress or pressure event. This feature is highly beneficial to reduce the seriousness of after-effects following a fall arrest event because it minimises the restriction of blood flow when a person remains suspended following the fall arrest event. The beneficial effects in this respect are neither acknowledged or suggested in the prior art.
In one embodiment it may be preferred that the protection zone comprises a pad of the energy absorbing material secured to the harness, for example secured to a strap or webbing part of the harness.
In one embodiment, it may be preferred that the pad comprises a self supporting energy absorbing composite. Such self supporting energy absorbing composites are disclosed in, for example WO2005/000966 and/or EP1458254.
It is preferred that the energy absorbing material is provided at the leg loop strap of the harness to protect the leg or groin area of the user.
Additionally or alternatively, the energy absorbing material may provided at the chest strap of the harness to protect the chest of the user.
The invention will now be further described in a specific embodiment, by way of example only, and with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Referring to the drawings, and initially to
In
In the situation shown in
Typically in such circumstances following a fall arrest event and in which the person remains suspended by the safety line 108 attached to the harness, blood pumped into the legs is prevented from returning to the heart by means of the leg loops 105 cutting into the groin. Additionally, the leg loops can cut the flesh of the user and cause serious injury. This is shown in
As shown now in
Importantly, the material of the protection zone pads 15 is formed of a particular material that has certain beneficial characteristics. In the event of an impulse load being applied to the pads 15 (for example in the circumstances of a fall arrest situation), the pads physical characteristics alter from a resilient or flexible conformal state to a more hardened or rigid material condition. The change of physical condition of the pads ensure that the impulse load applied via the harness straps is spread over a greater area and also that the harness is prevented from cutting into the body of the user thereby causing trauma damage or cutting off circulation to the user.
It is important that the pads are conformable to some degree prior to the hardening effect caused by the impulse force acting on them to change them to the hardened state. It is furthermore highly desirable that following the impulse event and the change to the hardened state, the material of the pads will subsequently return to the conformable (flexible and resilient) state. This is highly desirable because it ensures that any restriction to the circulation following the fall arrest event is minimised.
Materials that can be used for the protection zone pads are known in the prior art. For example, and particularly, as disclosed in WO2005/000966 and EP145825 materials described as composite materials which are elastic and exhibit resistive load under deformation which increases with the rate of deformation are described. Such materials are commercially available under the trade name d30 (registered trademark). As described in WO2005/000966 such composite materials are resistant to permanent set under various types of loading (compression, tension, sheer etc) and can revert to the flexible/resilient state following the energy/impact/impulse absorbing event. The material may be described in general terms as energy absorbing material that exhibits a change in physical properties at different applied strain rates.
Shear thickening materials or dilatants exhibit a change in physical properties at different applied strain rates, and are referred to in the prior art such as EP1458254. Such materials may viscously flow at low rates of deformation but at an elevated rate of deformation undergo a substantial increase in viscosity. EP1458254 describes how a self supporting composite having such properties may be arrived at. WO2005/000966 also describes energy absorbing composite polymers having such or similar properties.
WO2005/000966 and EP1832186 describe the use of a self-supporting energy absorbing composite in which a closed-cell foam matrix is used. However, certain benefits can also be obtained using other prior art described in EP1832186 in which the energy absorbing materials are not self-supporting but rather comprise, for example, dispersion of solid particles in a viscous fluid which is contained in an envelope. Important features in respect of the present invention are that the protective zone material is initially provided in a flexible/resilient/conformable condition, subsequently changing physical properties to a hardened condition upon application of an impulse force and subsequently returning to a resilient/conformable physical state.
As shown in the drawings, the protection zone pads 15 are secured to the leg loop straps 5 of the harness 2. In the situation shown in
Importantly, following a short time period, the material of the protection zone pads 15 returns to the flexible/resilient/conformable condition further enhancing the ability of the blood to circulate in the user's body (particularly to and from the user's legs). Therefore, in accordance with an important aspect of the invention, as a result of a sudden impact or applied stress or pressure event the energy absorbing material becomes substantially rigid, changing to a less rigid, more resilient, relaxed or conformable state after a elapsing of a time period following the sudden impact or applied stress or pressure event. This feature is highly beneficial to reduce the seriousness of after-effects following a fall arrest event because it minimises the restriction of blood flow when a person remains suspended following the fall arrest event. The beneficial effects in this respect are neither acknowledged or suggested in the prior art.
The invention has primarily been described in which protection zone pads 5 are secured to webbing or strap portions of the harness. In alternative embodiment substantially the entire harness, or webbing or strap lengths may be formed of the energy absorbent material.
There have been described and illustrated herein several embodiments of a safety harness system and corresponding method of operation. While particular embodiments of the invention have been described, it is not intended that the invention be limited thereto, as it is intended that the invention be as broad in scope as the art will allow and that the specification be read likewise. It will therefore be appreciated by those skilled in the art that yet other modifications could be made to the provided invention without deviating from its spirit and scope as claimed.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1105043.2 | Mar 2011 | GB | national |
This application claims priority from PCT/GB/2012/050662 filed on Mar. 26, 2012, and GB 1105043.2 filed on Mar. 25, 2011, all of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2012/050662 | 3/26/2012 | WO | 00 | 9/23/2013 |