1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an impact energy absorbing structure which is used to absorb impact energy on the heads of passengers during collisions in vehicles, for example.
2. Related Background Art
In order to ensure higher levels of passenger protection in the interior of vehicles such as automobiles, the recent trend has been toward the establishment of increasingly stringent standards regarding passenger safety measures and the like. In the United States, in particular, the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards have been strengthened (FMVSS 201U), resulting in more stringent regulations regarding measures for protecting passenger heads. In FMVSS 201U, dummy heads (mass 4.54 kg) referred to as free motion headforms (FMH) are used as the colliding object, which is caused to collide on an interior part (impact energy absorbing structure) at 24 km/h, and the total acceleration a (t) at the FMH center of gravity is measured.
In this test, the total acceleration a(t), measured from a sensor is treated with Equations (5) and (6), giving HIC(d). HIC(d) is stipulated at no more than 1000 in FMVSS 201U.
The terms in brackets in Equation (5) express the mean, between t1 and t2, of the total acceleration measured by a triaxial accelerometer sensor, and HIC is the standard for assessing passenger head protection performance.
To study what type of structure will permit the HIC(d) to be minimized, most studies have thus far been based on the time-acceleration behavior of the colliding object. As illustrated by the dash-dot line in
There is a trend toward stronger automobile safety standards in the US, as noted above, as well as a desire for greater safety in various other countries. Some vehicle interior parts with which the heads of passengers more likely collide should therefore function to absorb impact energy efficiently, such as roof side garnishes covering roof side rails or pillar garnishes covering various pillars inside vehicles such as the front, center, and rear pillars. On the other hand, such interior parts should be structured to efficiently absorb impact energy with low deformation in order to ensure greater space inside the vehicle. There is thus a need to develop impact energy absorbing structures which meet the above standards while preserving the most space possible in the vehicle.
In view of the foregoing, an object of the present invention is to provide an impact energy absorbing structure capable of efficiently absorbing kinetic energy during collision to alleviate the impact to passenger heads, in particular, while preserving the space inside vehicles. It is particularly an object of the present invention to provide an impact energy absorbing structure with even better impact energy absorbing properties than impact energy absorbing structures having rectangular wave deformation behavior (time-acceleration behavior of the colliding object) which have conventionally been considered ideal.
For achieving such object, the impact energy absorbing structure of this invention is characterized in that when a certain colliding object collides with said impact energy absorbing structure at a certain velocity, the following Formula (1) is satisfied by the relationship between dimensionless displacement D, where the deformation of the impact energy absorbing structure is normalized by the permissible deformation, and the dimensionless energy E, where the kinetic energy absorbed by the impact energy absorbing structure is normalized by the kinetic energy of the colliding object prior to collision.
E>D (1)
This makes it possible to provide an impact energy absorbing structure that is capable of efficiently absorbing kinetic energy during collision to alleviate the impact to passenger heads in particular while preserving space inside the vehicle, and that also has performance with a better impact energy absorbing pattern than the rectangular wave form which has conventionally been considered ideal. Although any material such as a resin, metal, or ceramic can be used for the material of the impact energy absorbing structure, resins are preferred because of advantages such as good formability, light weight, and ease of mass production.
Also the impact energy absorbing structure of this invention preferably comprises a substrate; an impact receiving member disposed parallel to the substrate; and a plurality of impact energy absorbing members that are disposed between the substrate and the impact receiving member, that deform while exerting repulsion on the colliding object, and that break when the critical deformation level is reached, wherein the critical deformation levels of each of the impact energy absorbing members are established stepwise within said permissible deformation range, and the repulsion of each of the impact energy absorbing members is set so as to meet the relationship between the dimensionless displacement D and dimensionless energy E defined in Formula (1). By differentiating properties of dimensionless energy (absorbed kinetic energy) relative to the dimensionless displacement of the aforementioned impact energy absorbing structure, the properties of dimensionless repulsion (load) relative to the dimensionless displacement of the impact energy absorbing structure can be found. The aforementioned structure makes it possible to easily produce an optimal model (model in which HIC(d) is minimized, with low permissible deformation) represented by such properties. That is, because dimensionless displacement is used as a parameter instead of time, the discrete values of such dimensionless displacement can correspond to the critical deformation of the impact energy absorbing members. Because the dimensionless repulsion is treated as a value, it can correspond to the synthetic repulsion of impact energy absorbing members that are not broken up, thereby making it possible to provide an impact energy absorbing structure with which an optimal model is readily realized.
Embodiments of the invention will be described below with reference to the drawings. The background leading to the concept of the impact energy absorbing structure of the invention will be described first. As already noted, HIC(d) is represented by Formulas (5) and (6). Formula (5) represents the maximum mean for total acceleration (absolute value for acceleration, magnitude of acceleration vector) in the deformation process (t2−t1) where the interval (t2−t1) is no more than 36 msec. During actual tests, the deformation behavior of the structure is ascertained in the form of the acceleration value relative to the deformation, for example, and this value can be calculated based thereon, but even in those cases, calculations are still required to a certain extent.
The inventors attempted to find the structure of an impact energy absorbing structure which would provide a low HIC(d) while ensuring greater interior space by means of computer-aided optimization. Variables expressing the deformation behavior of various structures were thus given as parameters (design variables) to a computer in an attempt to use a certain kinetic model in order to calculate the process of the deformation of these structures. Although continuous functions can be treated in terms of the model, considering the complexity of the calculation itself of the HIC(d), it would be desirable to produce a simplified model for more efficient calculations.
The inventors therefore introduced the concept of deformation intervals, where the deformation behavior of a structure is divided into intervals, and adopted a method by which the continuous deformation method is simulated by means of such discontinuous deformation intervals. More specifically, the process from the initial deformation of the structure to the permissible deformation S is evenly divided into deformation intervals of equivalent deformation (Δx=S/M, where Δx: divided intervals, M: number of divisions), and the acceleration is assumed to be constant over each of the divided intervals. A model is produced by noting how much of the kinetic energy of the colliding object is absorbed by the structure during these intervals.
This will be illustrated with reference to
(1) The initial kinetic energy E0 of the colliding object is first calculated based on the mass m (4.54 kg) of the colliding object and the collision velocity v0 (24 km/h).
(2) The kinetic energy Eab1 absorbed by the structure from the colliding object in the first interval is treated as α1 times the initial kinetic energy E0 (0≦α1≦1). Thus, the absorbed kinetic energy Eab1 in the first interval is given as:
Here, v1 is the velocity of the colliding object at the point in time where the initial interval is completed. Accordingly, the acceleration a1 at that interval is α1·E0/(mΔx), and the kinetic energy E1 of the colliding object having passed through the interval is (1−α1)·E0.
(3) Similarly, the kinetic energy Eabn absorbed at the nth interval is given as:
Eabn=αnEn−1=anmΔx (8)
The acceleration an at that interval is αn·En−1/(mΔx), and the kinetic energy En of the colliding object having passed through the interval is given as (1−αn)·En−1. Because the energy (αn·En−1) absorbed by the structure at the nth interval is an(mΔx), it is proportional to the acceleration an at that interval.
(4) It is only in the final Mth interval αM=1.0, in consideration of the fact that all the kinetic energy is consumed as a result of bottoming out.
(5) The time Δtn(Δtn=(vn−vn−1/an [an≠0], Δtn=Δx/Vn−1 [an=0]) it takes for the colliding object to pass through each interval is obtained from the velocities Vn−1 and Vn before and after the interval through which the colliding object passes, and the acceleration an during that interval.
Next, the pattern of deformation with minimized HIC(d) defined in Equations (5) and (6) is determined using computer-aided optimization based on the simplified kinetic model of collision described above. In the present embodiment, optimization is achieved using αn (0≦αn≦1:n=1, 2, . . . , M) as the design variable at each interval and the HIC(d) obtained from a (t) as the evaluation function. “iSIGHT” (ver 5.1) of Engineous Software, Inc. can be used as optimization software, and simulated annealing can be used as the optimization method. M, which is the number of interval divisions, is determined according to the balance between the necessary accuracy and the computing load, but is preferably about 4≦M≦20. As the result of the calculations, the HIC(d) value (minimum value) is output in combination with αn (0≦αn≦1:n=1, 2, . . . , M) giving the minimum value for HIC(d).
The patterns of αn (0≦αn≦1:n=1, 2, . . . , M) with minimum HIC(d) were actually determined for various permissible deformation levels S by the method described above. M=10 was established using “iSIGHT” (ver 5.1) by Engineous Software, Inc. as the optimization software and simulated annealing as the optimization method. The permissible deformation S serving as a condition was suitably spread out between 10 and 60 mm.
The figures show that the minimum HIC(d) is given not by the rectangular wave indicated by the dash-dot line in
The requirements for structures having good impact energy absorbing properties were then determined based on the features common to wave form patterns at varying permissible deformation levels having such an optimized pattern. In the following analysis, the dimensionless kinetic energy, which was obtained by dividing the kinetic energy(=energy absorbed by the structure) by the kinetic energy of the colliding object prior to collision, was used instead of the acceleration of the colliding object for the vertical axis.
E=D (9)
where E is the dimensionless energy of the vertical axis, and D is the dimensionless deformation of the horizontal axis. As indicated in the figure, the optimal lines (broken lines) are in the arc-shaped region above the straight line E=D. The curve encompassing in the upper side the group of absorption pattern lines giving the minimum HIC(d), is defined as:
E=f(D)=0.3D0.3+0.7 [1−(1−D)]2] (10)
A more detailed discussion is given below.
A closer look at
E=g(D)=(1−β)D+βf(D) (11)
When β=0, g(D)=D, in other words, the straight line (9), and when β=1, g(D)=f(D), in other words, the curve (10). When 0<β<1, the curve group is in the region between straight line (9) and curve (10), and when β<1, the curve group is above curve (10).
HIC(d) was calculated for cases where β was suitably varied in the region 0<β, that is, the region higher than straight line (9). The results are given in Table 2. Although the numerical values themselves for HIC(d) in the curve group (11) vary depending on the permissible deformation, the change tends to be the same. That is, the values gradually become lower the greater than 0 that β becomes, resulting in a minimum of around β=0.5 to 0.75, and the values then gradually increase. The values are better than in the case of a rectangular wave at all permissible deformation levels in the range 0<β≦1.06. In the range 1.07≦β≦1.19, the values are better than the rectangular wave form at some of the permissible deformation levels.
As indicated above, the curve group (11) giving good HIC(d) are in the range 0<β≦1.19 (such curves are referred to below as the good curves). However it is assumed that good properties may be expected even in cases not completely consistent with these good curves. That is because the optimal pattern lines such as those in
An approximation curve, that is, a good curve E−g (D) most closely resembling the various optimal pattern lines (these are expressed as E=h(D)) in
Another method for determining the deviation (“deviation factor”) between the approximation curve and optimal line E=h(D) is to determine the maximum ratio between the absorption energy in the optimal patterns in Table 1 and the absorption energy of the approximation curve determined as described above. The former method gives an index of the deviation as a whole, whereas the deviation obtained in this case can be considered an index of local deviation. The results are given in Table 4. According to this, a deviation R2 of −30%<R2<30% is considered a good range.
Below is a description of a method for actually producing an impact energy absorbing structure which has been designed by stipulating the profile of the absorption kinetic energy per unit deformation as described above. In this example, the impact energy absorbing structure that is produced has a permissible deformation of 30 mm, with an impact energy absorption properties pattern represented by a good curve in which β=0.5. 10 deformation intervals are set in this case. The absorption energy at each deformation interval of the impact energy absorbing structure having such an impact energy absorbing pattern can be calculated from the good curve in which β=0.5, as shown in Table 5. Thus, because
Eabn=anmΔx=fnΔx (12)
from Equation (8), the absorption energy can be calculated as the mean repulsion fn at the subject interval, based on this equation. The results are given in Table 5. The “ratio between structures breaking at the subject interval and structures at the interval 10” in Table 5 means the proportion of the repulsion of the impact energy absorbing members breaking at the interval relative to the synthetic repulsion of the total impact energy absorbing members left over the interval.
In such an impact energy absorbing structure having such a mean repulsion fn distribution at each interval, the mean repulsion f1 is in force at the first interval 1, the mean repulsion f2 is in force at the next interval 2, and the mean repulsion fn is in force at interval n. Since ordinarily fn≠fn−1, it is necessary to adjust the quantity of the structure at stages where the interval is changed. In this example, because the mean repulsion becomes lower (uniformly diminishes) as deformation progresses, the quantity of the structure involved in the deformation gradually diminishes.
Ways to ensure that the structural elements have such different breaking deformation levels include selecting a suitable material, changing the length of the material, or both. Ways to set the mean repulsion include selecting a suitable material, changing the cross section area, or both. In the illustrated example, structural elements A through J are arranged in rows. They are composed by attaching channel members having an L-shaped cross section to the edges of the structural members, where the other edge of one channel member is joined to a substrate, and the other edge of the other channel member extends toward the colliding object.
In this example, the material of the structural members was the same. The breaking deformation was therefore adjusted by the length in the direction of collision (not shown in figure; same length), and the mean repulsion was adjusted by the cross section area. In this example, the cross section area was adjusted by varying the depth of the structural elements as shown in
Tensile structural elements can be used in such an impact energy absorbing structure to allow the timing involved in the deformation of the structural elements to be set as desired. The breaking deformation and mean repulsion can be independently set by changing the material or dimensions, thereby allowing the desired impact energy absorbing properties pattern to be brought about. The aforementioned example was of a case in which the absorption energy, that is, the mean repulsion, in the impact energy absorbing properties pattern diminished uniformly, but for patterns which include cases of increasing repulsion, the channel members should be shortened in the direction of collision, for example, so that some of the structural elements involved in the deformation will deform more slowly than others.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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P2001-288731 | Sep 2001 | JP | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5749193 | Bucher | May 1998 | A |
6247745 | Carroll et al. | Jun 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030102628 A1 | Jun 2003 | US |