This invention relates to the sensing of impact between objects and a vehicle, and in particular to classification of the impacts to discern whether a pedestrian has impacted the front bumper of a vehicle. The invention also relates to the use of such sensing to actuate a safety device for the reduction of the severity of injury which may occur due to such impacts.
1. Background of the Invention
It is an urgent requirement that the severity of injury to a pedestrian resulting from impact with a vehicle be reduced. A particular event such as a pedestrian being in impact with the bumper of a vehicle can result in serious head injuries by the head striking the hood. Although some deformation of the hood can occur, the degree of deformation is restricted by the solid metal of the engine beneath. One possibility that has been proposed is for the hood to be “popped” open to provide some increase in the clearance between hood and engine, allowing increased deformation of the hood. In the case of sensing pedestrian impact, it is also desirable to distinguish whether the impact is due to contact with a pedestrian or something other than a pedestrian, e.g. a pole. Distinguishing between the two is desired in order to deploy the appropriate safety system. In the case of pedestrian impact, in addition or in place of the use of an automobile hood, other safety devices can also be actuated, such as air bags.
2. Discussion of the Prior Art
It has been proposed to position impact sensing devices on a front bumper, to actuate some form of safety device on the occurrence of an impact. However there is a problem in obtaining clear satisfactory indication of an impact. One such proposal is described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,329,910, in which an elongate metal bar is positioned in the lower air dam area of a bumper, the bar comprising a magnetosensitive sensor and a stress-conducting member. Drawbacks to this method include limited flexibility of the components, unlikely return to a working condition after an impact, and interference from electrical fields and impulses. Prior art also includes piezoelectric films such as polyvinylidenedifluoride (PVDF) which produce an electrical current when bent. PVDF sensors suffer from variability of response, poor integrity of electrical connections when bent, and the requirement for high impedance circuitry with consequent reliability problems in wet environments. It is also possible to sense impacts with conductive rubber sensors, which change impedance when stressed or bent. Drawbacks include poor flexibility at low temperatures, material properties which must be tailored for both mechanical flexibility and electrical conduction, and changes in sensitivity to bending at different temperatures.
It has also been proposed to attach sensors to various members of a vehicle body, to detect and, in some cases, classify impacts between the vehicle and other vehicles or stationary objects. In such systems, one of the important features is to provide safety for the occupants of the vehicle. Classification of impacts enables a decision to be made as to whether a safety device such as an airbag should be deployed.
The present invention is concerned with detecting and classifying impacts which are likely to be less strong and, frequently, may not result in any great danger to the occupants. An object of the present invention is to detect an impact between a pedestrian and a vehicle and actuate a safety device which will reduce possible injury to the pedestrian, while preventing actuation when impacts with other objects such as poles, barriers, and walls are detected.
Thus according to the present invention, apparatus for sensing impacts between a vehicle and an object, comprises an optical fiber sensor for positioning on the vehicle, the sensor including at least one optical fiber having a light source at one end and a light detector at the other end. The fiber has at least one sensing zone having a light loss area located on the fiber periphery on a side of the fiber facing toward the direction of an expected impact and another light loss area facing away from the direction of expected impact.
In one aspect of the present invention, an optical fiber array extends across and is attached to a bumper of a vehicle. The array can comprise at least one fiber. One or more sensor zones are provided on each fiber of the array, so that location as well as type of impact may be sensed because the locations of the zones will be known, and zones will be designed to sense a wide range of impact shapes and types, without missing important characteristics used in classification.
The form and arrangement of the sensor or sensors can vary considerably. Sensor zones may be formed according to prior art described in Danisch, L. A., Fiber optic bending and position sensor including a light emission surface formed on a portion of a light guide, U.S. Pat. No. 5,321,257, Jun. 14, 1994; Danisch, L. A., Fiber optic bending and position sensor with selected curved light emission surfaces, U.S. Pat. No. 5,633,494, May 27, 1997, Danisch, L. A., Fiber optic bending and position sensor, European Patent No. EP 0 702 780, Oct. 22, 1997, Danisch, L. A., Topological and motion measuring tool, U.S. Pat. No. 6,127,672, Oct. 3, 2000, Danisch, L. A., Danisch, J. F., and Lutes, J. P., Topological and motion measuring tool (II), U.S. Pat. No. 6,563,107, and Danisch, L. A., Transversely coupled fiber optic sensor for measuring and classifying contact and shape, Canadian Patent Application filed May 11, 1999.
In the above prior art, the sensors are designed with loss on one side, providing an asymmetrical loss and bipolar response, so that a sensor zone will respond with an increase in light throughput to a given polarity of bend, and have a decreased throughput for the opposite polarity of bend. The sensor zone on the fiber has a bipolar response, and each portion within the zone also has the bipolar response. Consequently, the overall response of the zone is the integral of curvature over the zone length, which amounts to the net angle from beginning to end of the zone. This is useful in maintaining angular accuracy for sensors that have curvature detail within a zone, but has the unfortunate consequence that inflected bends (bends containing positive and negative components) within the zone may sum to zero.
Impacts with vehicle fronts or sides usually result in ‘intrusions’ rather than simple bends. The distinction is that intrusions generally include positive and negative bends, so they can be called ‘inflected’. The intrusions from small objects like a pole or leg are often small in extent (1-6 cm) compared to the length of a bumper (1-2 meters).
Thus it is desirable to include sensor zones within an array that have a robust response to inflected bends (non-bipolar response) within individual sensing zones, yet maintain a significant light throughput when not impacted. Danisch '257 and '494 include descriptions of a fiber that is lossy throughout its circumference and has such a non-bipolar response. However, the circumferential treatment does not meet the requirement for bumper sensing that the throughput be maintained over long sensor lengths or many short consecutive sensor lengths on the same fiber. It is thus a further object of this invention to provide a sensor that has non-bipolar response with high modulation from bending, and also has maximum throughput.
U.S. Pat. No. '494 describes sensors with loss surfaces that are arranged peripherally or axially. Because the impacted shape of a bumper is mainly within the horizontal plane, it is desirable to produce maximum modulation for impacts by providing light loss surfaces within that plane, and to minimize light loss within other planes intersecting the axis of the fiber. By making the light loss surfaces symmetrical (i.e. one faces the impact, the other faces away), a completely non-bipolar response is obtained for impacts. If the surfaces have minimal peripheral extent, then light throughput is maintained.
In applications requiring response to more than one plane intersecting the axis of the fiber, more thin light loss strips may be added around the circumference of the fiber. Alternatively, a light loss strip may wind around the fiber in a helical shape. Impacted shapes also typically involve impacted pressure fields that occur at similar locations to the impact bends. It is possible to either ignore the pressure by designing the attachment of the sensors to exclude pressure effects but respond only to shape (such as by mounting the sensor in a slot within the bumper with free air on one side of the sensor), or to use pressure as the means of classifying shapes and measuring the time progression and mass of intrusion, with or without the combined measurement of bending. In this case the light loss areas may be created by using the pressure of an impact to press a film with varying surface profile into the fiber at a known location at the time of Impact Suitable films include woven screens, sandpaper, and sinuated or waffle-patterned plastic. The impression film will create microbends in the fiber, which will result in light being lost from the core into the cladding or out of the cladding. Microbends are any series of small bends or sinuations along the length of an intended sensor location. The impression film may be located on the sides of the fiber facing away from and toward the impact, or on one side only. If located on both sides, the effects of light loss due to pressure and of bending while losing light will be synergistic, and symmetrical to both directions of curvature, so it is preferable to have the impression film on both sides. If the impression film is located on one side only, the effects are synergistic for pressure and bend but will be less symmetrical for both directions of bend. Creation of loss surfaces by this method has the advantage that when the sensor is not being impacted, there is very little light loss, so that the change upon impact is very large.
Whether the microbends are applied from both sides or one side of the fiber, the method differs from classical microbend sensing, wherein a fiber is compressed between two flat but waffled platens. In the method of this patent, the platens are flexible so that the fiber receives pressure and microbends, but is free also to flex, so that flexure produces additional light loss due to increased interaction of light with the microbend-induced loss surfaces. A typical configuration for such a sensor is sandwiched between two layers of flexible foam or gel, which will transmit pressure fields but allow flexure. For this reason, included are microbend-inducing patterned films as a means of producing light loss surfaces throughout this patent filing. In the case of arrays of sensors, the impression film may comprise a single film covering the entire array, with patterned areas on the film being placed at desired sensor locations (see
A sensor meeting the objectives can comprise a single fiber having two loss surfaces in opposition extending along the length of the fiber, with a light source connected to one end and a light detector connected to the other end. While effective in indicating an impact, such a sensor cannot give any data as to the position of the impact along the bumper. Another similar arrangement is a single fiber extending in a loop for positioning of light source and light detector at the same end. Both legs of the loop can have a sensor or sensors, or only one length.
For more detailed information concerning the impact, a plurality of sensors can be positioned along a fiber. Alternatively a plurality of fibers can be provided, side-by-side, each fiber having a sensor, the sensors spaced along the bumper. A further alternative is a plurality of fibers extending side-by-side, with a plurality of sensors spaced along each fiber. In yet a further arrangement, a sensor can comprise a plurality of light loss surfaces with varying pattern arrangements. Typical arrangements are surfaces spaced axially relative to each other, or spaced peripherally, or a combination of both. The surfaces can extend axially, peripherally or a combination, such as in a helix.
By suitably arranging the sensors across a bumper, it is possible to identify the position of the impact. The sizes and arrangement of light loss surfaces can provide data concerning the impact.
The array of fibers may include bipolar and non-bipolar sensors, so that inflected shapes (e.g. dents) and non-inflected shapes (e.g. shallow curves of one polarity) may be differentiated.
The array of fibers may also include bipolar and non-bipolar sensors which have varying amounts of light loss on one or both sides when straight, thereby imparting a region of operation over which the sensors have a given change in output per bend (slope), and regions over which the sensors have a different slope. The change in slope for a given sensor may occur at different absolute values of bend for positive and negative bend. Thus, these sensors have a region of absolute values of bend over which their response is linear, and two other ranges over which their responses are nonlinear.
The sensor or sensor system of the present invention will normally be utilized with an electronic control system; such control systems are well known in the art for use for various purposes (e.g. seatbelts, air bags, alarms, engine control, etc.). Generally speaking, such an electronic control system will employ an algorithm which will choose which sensor or sensors are most affected by an impact; the control system will also generally store a defined number (e.g. a few hundred) samples of the signal from the most affected sensor(s) in order to process the data obtained over a defined time period, and obtain a “calculation window”. The latter time period is relatively short compared to the time necessary to make a deployment decision.
Further, the algorithm may typically average several samples of early data and several samples of later data (avg 1, avg 2) and provide a calculation of the slope of avg 2 versus avg 1 (avg 2−avg 1 divided by time between them) which will yield a “rate” calculated for two groups of data separated by a gap. The electronic control system through the algorithm can also compute slopes for all groups of avg 1 and avg 2 samples of earliest data and samples of later data within a calculation window—in such an arrangement, avg1 and avg2 are separated by an equivalent amount of time (thus providing a “moving gap rate”). The slopes will be normalized according to measured speed of a vehicle as determined from other sensors (e.g. an ABS system). The information provided from such a system will generate a magnitude of slope which will indicate whether a pedestrian impact or some other type of impact (such as a pole) has occurred. The time when the slope begins to decrease markedly will indicate the peak time of an impact signal, which would form a classification index. Thus, the magnitude of the slope once the type of object is determined, together with speed information from e.g. the ABS system, will be used to determine a mass of the object and rate of intrusion into the bumper. This may be achieved by utilizing stored information which characterizes the system with test objects of known masses and various impact velocities which will determine calibration factors.
It is possible for algorithms such as the above to classify impacts measured by bipolar sensors or non-bipolar sensors. For instance, the bipolar sensors may be sufficiently numerous to resolve in part the shape of inflected curves. Or, bipolar or non-bipolar sensors may be used on the basis of locational information only being obtained from the array of sensors, while classification is achieved by calibrating the signal progression through time against the type of impact (e.g. type of object, mass, and rate of intrusion). It can be helpful in developing a classification algorithm to use mechanical, optical, and electronic models of the front end of the car, the bumper, the optical array on a substrate in the bumper, the optical fibers, the adhesive systems, and the signal processing, combined with extensive characterization by crash testing to validate the models, in order to get the most information and best classification from any given type of sensor.
Further, the front end construction may be changed to diminish bends of multiple polarities within a sensing zone. For instance, stiffness may be increased to prevent inflected bends from occurring on a scale where a single sensor would be subjected to both positive and negative bends. Or, a layer of resilient material like foam may be placed between a stiff front bumper and the sensory fibers. This will have the effect of absorbing inflected bends from the earliest portion of the impact when the contact area between an object and the bumper is small compared to a sensor length, and thereafter (after a short delay) transmitting all of the non-inflected bend.
For any type or configuration of sensor and front end construction, the classification accuracy may be optimized by using combinations of algorithms, testing, and modelling approaches. This invention is aimed at optimizing the locational and time-progression aspects of the signal contents, and minimizing the number of sensors required to make a classification.
The invention is concerned with the method of detecting, and where required, classifying impacts with a vehicle, and also an apparatus for such detection, and classification. Apparatus, in accordance with the invention, can comprise an optical fiber array, comprising one or more fibers, with one or more sensors, as an entity for attachment to a bumper. Light sources and detectors can be previously attached for the apparatus to be ready for applying and connection to the control unit—usually positioned within the vehicle. Alternatively, the light sources and detectors can be connected to the fiber array after the fiber array has been applied to the bumper.
A method, in accordance with the invention, comprises applying an optical fiber array to a bumper of a vehicle, the optical fiber array having one or more sensors extending along the array, each sensor having light loss surfaces in opposition, detecting a variation in a light signal in the fiber array indication of an impact with and deformation of the bumper, producing an output signal related to the variation in light signal, and using the output to control actuation of a safety device.
In other cases also in accord with the invention, the light loss surface within a sensor length is arranged to symmetrically include each plane of application that is of interest. By “symmetrically include” it Is meant that the light loss surface occurs in the periphery of the fiber on the portion of the periphery facing an impact, and on the portion facing away from the impact. Furthermore, the width of the light loss surface is adjusted to be narrow enough to maximize throughput for an unbent fiber, and wide enough or containing sufficient loss regions within a given width and length to produce an acceptably large modulation of light level with bending.
Light loss zones may preferably be created by abrasion, ablation, or impact, combined with light-absorption. The objective is to create a loss zone with an amount of loss invariant over time, but that varies with bending. Treatment to form the loss zone may vary from low-depth abrasion of the surface, in which case a thoroughly absorptive layer is applied to ensure full loss of scattered light, to high-depth notches, which may not require significant additional absorptive layer to obtain full modulation by bend. However, the light-absorbing layer will always be desirable for reducing the effects of light from other sources external to the fiber, and may include adhesive properties and sealing properties. An example of abrasion is roughening by sandpaper or sand-blasting. An example of ablation is removal of material at low temperature by ultraviolet laser. An example of impact treatment is pressing a sharpened blade into the fiber to create notches.
In the description of various embodiments of the invention above, and in the detailed description below the term “optical sensor” or “optical fiber sensor” or “optical fiber array” includes fiber or light guides of any cross sectional shape and size.
FIGS. 2(a) and 2(b) illustrate sensor deformations;
The invention provides various forms of optical fiber arrays and various forms of sensors for detecting, classifying and measuring inflected and non-inflected bends, their progression in time and to calculate shape, mass and velocity of intruding objects and also to identify such objects by shape, resilience, vibration and dampening. It is not necessarily a requirement that all of these determinations be obtained at all times, the actual determination being selected to suit the particular requirements of the method and apparatus.
Various characteristic curves for sensors can be combined in an array to facilitate classification and measurement.
The configuration of
The design of a sensor of any given characteristic curve involves tradeoffs of modulation percentage and throughput. In
In
In
For sensors covering from millimeters up to a few centimeters, the loss areas can be continuous along the fiber, and have large features resulting in large loss within the loss area, but throughput is kept high by limiting the peripheral extent to the plane of maximum sensitivity (i.e., narrow, continuous loss areas facing toward and away from an impact). Treatment of the fiber surface can be carried out, as by impression, laser ablation, abrasion and other means.
In general, the sensor zones or regions are comprised of continuous or distributed light loss areas which can be spaced peripherally and axially. Preferably, the peripheral distribution, or spacing, should be limited to that required to achieve a characteristic curve (such as non-bipolar and linear) with maximum sensitivity in the plane of impact (i.e., treat two sides), and axial distribution, or spacing, should be optimized for a trade-off of throughput and modulation percentage.
System design of a sensor array can vary.
Alternatively mass and velocity (and type) are inferred from the time progression of the signals, but the location of the impact will not be known.
Where peripherally opposed pairs of light loss bands or areas are formed, the bands or areas of a pair are preferably peripherally aligned. However, one band or area of a pair can be axially displaced relative to the other less than half the band length on the axial centres of the bands.
The optical fiber sensor array (14 in
In
In
The optical fiber array 14 is attached to the bumper 12, for example the front outside surface as illustrated in
The array can be applied to the bumper at a completion stage of the bumper, for example, or applied after complete manufacture. It is possible to apply the array after final assembly of the vehicle. Such after assembly attachment would occur, for example, as a retroactive up-date to existing vehicles. In such instances an array could be packaged and sold as an item for attachment to existing vehicles. Suitable electronic connections would be made to a control system, or the like, positioned at a convenient place in the vehicle.
In operation, normally the sensor(s) on the bumper will convert light signals to digital signals, which will be fed to an electronic control system having an algorithm such as that described above (other algorithms can be used as will be understood by those skilled in the art). Once the signals are received by the electronic control system, the system will send a trigger to the safety deployment system (such as the activation of the hood being raised, etc.) when required.
The array installation can vary in complexity depending upon the desired information required. Thus it can merely detect, and indicate, that an impact occurred. Towards the other extreme, the speed of distortion or bending of the bumper and array, the severity, possibly the shape, and also the position can be detected, with appropriate signals produced. The signals can be used to cause actuation of various safety devices. In addition, or alternative to the popping open of a hood, actuation of air bags can be obtained. A further possibility is the actuation of a safety device, which could be the opening of the hood, to act as a deflector, such as would act to deflect an animal either up, or to the side, on impact, or to activate the airbags to protect occupants when an animal strike is detected. It often occurs that when a vehicle hits an animal, such as a horse, deer or other similar animal, the animal often goes through the windshield, causing severe injuries to occupants of the vehicle.
Some objectives for installations are:
(a) a low sensor “count” for example sixteen or fewer, for economical reasons;
(b) classification by type of impact and measurement of mass and velocity, which can be of more importance than exact knowledge of location (a likely goal being to locate to nearest quarter of a bumper length);
(c) response from a sensor should include information that can be processed to extract mass and velocity information—should be more than an on/off information; and, (d) response should be the same anywhere along a given sensitized length of fiber (sensor length).
A most useful type of sensor is in most cases a linear bipolar one, but non linear and non-bipolar sensors can also be used if suitably designed and installed, in cases where economy dictates the use of fewer sensors.
Broadly, a sensor zone on a fiber provides a sensor having a variety of forms of light loss areas. The areas can vary from those which extend completely peripherally around the fiber, to thin strips along the fiber. With peripherally extending loss areas, two or more are spaced axially, to give an axial dimension to the sensor. For thin strips, normally two at least are provided, spaced circumferentially, and extending axially to give an axial dimension. Other forms, such as helical and other formations can be provided, and the actual shape of the light loss areas can vary, subject only to the requirement that a sensor has light loss areas spaced peripherally and extending axially.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/CA04/00518 | Apr 2004 | WO | international |
2424708 | Aug 2003 | CA | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/CA04/00158 | Apr 2004 | US |
Child | 11228304 | Sep 2005 | US |