The present disclosure relates generally to inflatable airbag cushions for motor vehicles. More specifically, various embodiments of the present disclosure relate to airbag cushion inflators, automotive connectors for use with such inflators, as well as methods of making inflators and automotive connectors used in inflatable airbag systems for motor vehicles.
Modern motor vehicles typically employ various occupant protection systems that self-actuate from an undeployed to a deployed state without the need for intervention by the occupant. Such systems often include an inflatable occupant protection system in the form of a cushion or bag, commonly referred to as an “airbag cushion,” which is now a legal requirement for many new vehicles. Such airbag cushions are typically installed in various locations in a vehicle and may deploy into one or more locations within the vehicle between the occupant and certain parts of the vehicle interior, such as the doors, steering wheel, instrument panel, dashboard or the like, to prevent or cushion the occupant from forcibly striking such parts of the vehicle interior.
Various types or forms of occupant protection systems have been developed or tailored to provide desired vehicle occupant protection based on either or both the position or placement of the occupant within the vehicle and the direction or nature of the vehicle collision. For example, driver and passenger inflatable cushion installations have found wide usage for providing protection to drivers and front seat passengers, respectively, in the event of a head-on type of collision. Other installations have found wide usage for providing protection to vehicle occupants in the event of a side impact (e.g., side collision, roll-over).
The airbag cushion is conventionally housed in an uninflated and folded condition to minimize space requirements. In the event of an accident, an accelerometer within the vehicle measures the abnormal deceleration and triggers the expulsion of rapidly expanding gases supplied or produced by a device commonly referred to as an “inflator.” The expanding gases fill the airbags, which immediately inflate in front of the driver and/or passenger to provide protection from impact against a windshield, dashboard, or other surfaces of the vehicle interior.
The inflator typically includes an igniter assembly with an initiator (or squib) coupled with an automotive connector for igniting a gas generant housed within the inflator.
Various embodiments of the present disclosure comprise igniter assemblies that include a relatively low profile and are adapted for use with inflators for inflatable airbag cushion systems. In one or more embodiments, an igniter assembly may include an initiator comprising an adapter with an opening formed therein, an ignition portion and a plurality of conductors electrically coupled to the ignition portion and extending in a first direction from the ignition portion to the opening of the adapter. The opening of the adapter may be formed to receive a connector slid into the opening in a second direction transverse to the first direction in which the plurality of conductors extend. In at least some embodiments, a connector may be adapted for disposition within the opening of the adapter. Such a connector may include a plurality of terminals, where each terminal is adapted to be coupled to a respective conductor of the plurality of conductors of the initiator.
Additional embodiments of the present disclosure include airbag system inflators including a low-profile igniter assembly. According to various embodiments, an inflator may include a body enclosing a quantity of gas generant therein. An initiator may be coupled to the body and positioned at least partially within the body to be in sufficient communication with the quantity of gas generant to initiate a reaction for producing a supply of inflation gas during deployment. The initiator may include an adaptor with an opening formed therein, and an entry to the opening positioned at a lateral side of the adapter. The initiator may further include an ignition portion and a plurality of conductors electrically coupled to the ignition portion and extending in a first direction therefrom to the opening of the adaptor. In at least some embodiments, a connector may be adapted for disposition within the opening of the adaptor. The connector may include a plurality of terminals, each adapted to be coupled to a respective conductor of the initiator.
Other embodiments of the present disclosure comprise methods of forming an airbag system inflator including a low-profile igniter assembly. One or more embodiments of such methods may include forming an inflator body and disposing a quantity of gas generant within the body. An initiator may be formed comprising an ignition portion, an adaptor that includes an opening adapted to receive a connector slid therein in a connector insertion direction, and a plurality of conductors electrically coupled to the ignition portion. The plurality of conductors may extend from the ignition portion to the opening of the adaptor in a conductor extension direction that is transverse to the connector insertion direction for receiving a connector into the opening. The initiator may be positioned at least partially in the body so that it is in sufficient proximity with the quantity of gas generant to initiate a reaction for producing a supply of inflation gas during deployment. In at least some embodiments, a connector can be inserted into the opening of the adapter in the connector insertion direction until each terminal of a plurality of terminals is electrically coupled to a respective conductor of the initiator's plurality of conductors.
Exemplary embodiments of the disclosure will become more fully apparent from the following description and appended claims, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings. Understanding that these drawings depict only exemplary embodiments and are, therefore, not to be considered limiting of the disclosure's scope, the exemplary embodiments of the disclosure will be described with additional specificity and detail through use of the accompanying drawings in which:
The illustrations presented herein are, in some instances, not actual views of any particular connector, initiator, igniter assembly or inflator, but are merely idealized representations which are employed to describe the present devices and methods. Additionally, elements common between figures may retain the same numerical reference designation.
Various embodiments of the present disclosure include airbag cushion inflators for use in inflatable airbag systems for motor vehicles.
The diffuser member 202 can comprise a dish-shaped configuration with a lateral sidewall around its lateral diameter. The sidewall of the diffuser member 202 can include one or more apertures 208 through which an inflation gas can exit from the inflator 200 during deployment.
The base member 204 can also comprise a similar dish-shaped configuration with a lateral sidewall about its lateral diameter. The base member 204 may be configured to receive and be coupled with at least one igniter assembly 210. That is, the base member 204 may include an aperture adapted to receive and be coupled with one or more igniter assemblies 210.
According to a feature of the present disclosure, the igniter assembly 210 is configured with a relatively low profile in comparison with traditional igniter assemblies. By reducing the profile of the igniter assembly 210, the overall space used by the igniter assembly 210 (e.g., the igniter assembly's 210 “footprint”) can be significantly reduced. Such reduction in the footprint of the igniter assembly 210 can make additional space available for other inflator components and/or can allow for a significant reduction in the overall size (or footprint) of the inflator 200. In other words, by freeing up space as a result of the low-profile igniter assembly 210 described herein, the inflator 200 can accommodate additional or larger components, which may improve performance, and/or the inflator 200 can maintain equivalent performance in smaller geometry.
As shown in
Upon initiating the reaction of the gas generant 302, a supply of inflation gas is produced that flows outward from the body 206 through the apertures 208 in the diffuser member 202. A filter 312 may be provided, which filter 312 is adapted to remove debris and heat from the inflation gas as the inflation gas is flowing to the apertures 208 of the diffuser member 202. The filter 312 can accordingly be positioned within the body 206 of the inflator 200 between the quantity of gas generant 302 and the apertures 208 in the diffuser 202.
Turning to
The initiator 304 includes an adapter 402 which is shaped to couple the initiator 304 to the body 206 of the inflator 200. In at least some embodiments, the adapter 402 may comprise an injection molded material formed to surround a portion of the sidewall of the base member 204. The ignition portion 308 can include conventional components as are generally known, but not shown in
As shown in
As best shown in
The connector 306 generally includes a housing 408, in which a plurality of conductive elements 410 may extend. The housing 408 can comprise an electrically insulating material. The conductive elements 410 can be communicatively coupled to a sensor and adapted to transmit an electrical signal generated upon sensing a collision. A ferrite bead 412 may be positioned within the housing 408 to surround the plurality of conductive elements 410. That is, the conductive elements 410 may extend through one or more apertures within the ferrite bead 412. The ferrite bead 412 can provide protection from electromagnetic and radio frequency interference that may tend to be extraneously induced in the conductive elements 410.
According to a feature, various embodiments of the igniter assembly 210 may include an insertion assurance component 414 coupled to a portion of the connector 306. The insertion assurance component 414 can provide an indication that the connector 306 is fully inserted into the opening 406, can retain or lock the connector 306 in the opening 406, or both. In one or more embodiments, as shown in
Referring now to
In at least some embodiments, the adaptor 402 may be formed to include one or more connector retention features 704 adapted to extend over at least a portion of the opening 406 to restrict movement of an inserted connector. In the embodiment shown in
The opening 406 may further include a key slot 706. The key slot 706 can correspond with a projection (not shown) in the housing 408 of a connector (such as connector 306 in
Additional embodiments of the present disclosure relate to methods of forming inflators for use in airbag assemblies, which inflators include a low-profile igniter assembly.
At step 906, an initiator is formed with an ignition portion, an adaptor, and a plurality of conductors electrically coupled to the ignition portion and extending from the ignition portion to an opening of the adaptor. For example, the initiator may be embodied similar to the initiator 304, with an adaptor 402, an ignition portion 308, and a plurality of conductors 404, as illustrated in
At step 908, the initiator (e.g., initiator 304) may be positioned at least partially in the body 206 and within sufficient proximity of the gas generant 302 to initiate a reaction for producing a supply of inflation gas during deployment. While positioning the initiator 304 at least partially in the body 206, the adapter 402 may be disposed so that it is coupled to the base member 204 of the body 206.
At step 910, a connector can be inserted into the opening of the adapter until each terminal of the connector is electrically coupled to a respective conductor of the initiator's plurality of conductors. As has been described herein above, the adapter, such as adapter 402, can include an opening 406 having an entry 702 located at a lateral side, as shown in
Although the forgoing method 900 is depicted as a flowchart in which operational acts are described and depicted as a sequential process, it should be understood that many of these acts can be performed in another sequence, in parallel, or substantially concurrently. In addition, the order of the acts may be re-arranged.
The present invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from its structures, methods, or other essential characteristics as broadly described herein and claimed hereinafter. The described embodiments are to be considered in all respects only as illustrative, and not restrictive. The scope of the invention is, therefore, indicated by the appended claims, rather than by the foregoing description. All changes that come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are to be embraced within their scope.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20130276659 A1 | Oct 2013 | US |