This invention relates generally to protective headgear and, more specifically, to an impact absorbing, modular helmet that prevents injury and reduces damage to the user.
Protective headgear or helmets have been worn for a long time now, by individuals to protect against head injuries. The use of helmets is often a mandatory requirement for driving bicycles and certain other motor vehicles, in high impact sports and in material handling and other potentially hazardous locations.
The use of safety helmets has been just that—to reduce or completely protect the user from any top, lateral and penetration impact to the user's head. However, commonly used protective headgears use a hard outer casing with an impact-energy absorbing padding placed between the outer casing and the user's head. The flaw in these hard casing helmets is that they actually permit the generation of a high-impact shock wave and only after this shock wave is generated are they designed to minimize the strength of the shock wave and reduce its effects by the use of shock absorbing material between the hard casing and the user's head. If a rider wearing such a typical helmet falls off from a bicycle or a motorbike (to the side) and hits the surface hard with the helmet, the impact of the hard shell meeting the hard surface generates a shockwave and a high impact force, which is then absorbed (as best as possible) by the inner shock-absorbing material inside the hard casing and in contact with the rider's head. The impact force is often so great that the rider's helmet may even initially bounce back upon contacting the surface and the head may be yanked back subjecting the head and neck regions to additional injury causing forces. If the impact is high enough, it may lead to a concussion (striking of the brain matter to the skull with moderate force) or even a contusion (striking of the brain matter to the skull with high force) and may also lead to skull fracture.
Published research suggests that the human skull can fracture at decelerations as low as 225 G's and that concussions can occur at substantially lower decelerations. Research has shown that to offer maximum protection to the head, the rate of deceleration should be as low as possible.
Further, mandatory rules by industry organizations and/or government regulations often obligate the work force of specific industries such as the construction industry to wear ‘hard hats’, which again carry the limitations mentioned above—that of permitting the initial generation of a shock wave and ensuing attempts by shock absorbing padding in the headgear to absorb the said impact forces that cause this shockwave.
Hence, it is the object of the present invention to overcome the abovementioned problems and create a novel and improved, versatile, impact absorbing protective helmet.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a helmet that reduces the shockwave generation at the first instance itself, by increasing the time of impact and thereby reducing the deceleration rate of the impact forces acting on the user's helmet.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a multi-layered helmet that prevents damage by lowering the rate of deceleration of the user's head.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide a multi-layered helmet with at least one impact-energy absorbing outer casing.
It is still yet another object of the present invention to provide a protective high impact-energy absorbing layer that can be used universally over hard casing helmets.
It is still yet another object of the present invention to provide a protective helmet that can be manufactured economically.
The present invention incorporates plural high impact-energy absorbing outer layers secured to the rigid shell of a protective helmet. The helmet further has at least one energy absorbent material between the hard casing and the user's head.
The preferred embodiment of the present invention (
This outer layer is firmly attached to the next energy-absorbing layer 20, which is a honeycombed structure with hollow hexagonal cells. It should be noted that the walls of these hexagonal cells are perforated with oval or circular shaped holes so that when a particular hexagonal cell is compressed by an external impact, the air in this cell may pass through the holes in the walls to adjacent cells. The energy absorbing layer in typical helmets, which exists between the rigid shell and the user's head, is shown by 15. The top view (plan) and side view of layers 20 and 30 are shown independently in
When the rider of a bike wearing such a helmet falls of the vehicle and the helmet impacts the ground surface, the outer layer 30 undergoes elastic deformation and compresses the honeycombed layer 20 below it. The air within the cells of this honeycombed layer, which have been compressed by the outer layer are then pushed out through the holes in the walls of the honeycombed layer into adjacent cells and during this process both the walls and the air within the honeycombed layer gradually resist the impact of the force on the helmet, thereby increasing the time of contact (or the duration of impact) before passing on the impact force to the hard casing of the helmet. As the impact force is inversely proportional to the square of the time of impact, this resistance by the outer layer 30 and the honeycombed layer 20 reduces the impact forces acting on the helmet.
When the impact force is no longer in effect, such as when the helmet is no longer in contact with the ground or other object, the elastic nature of the walls of the hexagonal cells of the honeycombed layer 20 comes into play and the walls regain their original shape. During this process of the compressed walls (of the hexagonal cells that bore the impact) regaining their original shape, air is automatically sucked in from the adjacent cells through the holes in the walls until equilibrium is reached. Similarly, the elastic nature of the outer layer 30 makes the layer retain its original shape. The outer layer 30 may also be chosen of material that would move radially inward while remaining completely rigid, instead of undergoing elastic deformation. Such radial movement inward would also compress the cells in the honeycombed hexagonal layer 20 and result in the reduction of the impact forces, as described above.
In this embodiment, the layer 30 may consist of an attachment strip, which binds the lower edges of this outer layer with the hard casing of the helmet, as depicted in
In a modification of the preferred embodiment, the outer layer(s) may consist of a third layer made of energy absorbing, uniformly consistent material such as flexible polyurethane foam, which would be directly in contact with the hard casing of the helmet and the above two layers 20 and 30 would be on the outer side of such a layer. This third outer layer would further increase the time of impact as it elastically deforms itself while absorbing the impact forces and thereby further reduces the strength of the impact force.
In another embodiment of the present invention, the outer layer 30 may be made up of an alloy of suitable metals or of composite material. It may include nano-materials or be made using nanotechnology based manufacturing processes.
In a modification of the embodiments described above, the outer layer(s) may be manufactured as an integrated, standalone protective layer that could be universally adapted and incorporated onto any existing helmet to transfer the benefits elucidated above.
In the foregoing specification, the invention has been described with reference to an illustrative embodiment thereof. However, it will be evident that various modifications and changes may be made thereto without departing from the broader spirit and scope of the invention. The specification and drawings are, accordingly, to be regarded in an illustrative rather than a restrictive sense. Therefore, it is the object of the appended claims to cover all such modifications and changes as come within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
The present application is a continuation of application Ser. No. 10/881,068, filed on Jun. 30, 2004, which claims priority from provisional application Ser. No. 60/483,858 filed Jun. 30, 2003, the subject matter of all of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60483858 | Jun 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10881068 | Jun 2004 | US |
Child | 11477769 | Jun 2006 | US |