Embodiments of the present invention relate generally to airbags for use in passenger transport vehicles. The airbags are designed to safely interrupt a passenger's forward momentum in the event of a crash condition.
Airbags are occupant restraining devices, which typically include a flexible envelope or “bag” that is designed to inflate rapidly during a collision in order to prevent the vehicle's occupants from striking interior objects located in front of (or, in some cases, on the side of) the occupant. In automobiles, airbags are designed to prevent occupants from striking the steering wheel, the vehicle door, a window, or any other interior objects. In aircraft, airbags are designed to prevent passengers from striking the seat in front each passenger, the tray tables, a window, or any other interior objects. Airbags on passenger rail cars (such as trains, monorails, trolleys), motorcycles, and other passenger transport vehicles work similarly.
Most modern vehicles contain multiple airbags. For example, most automobiles provide an airbag in front of each occupant seating position (at least in the front seat), to protect the head and torso. They may also contain knee airbags, which protect the occupant's knees and legs. Most aircraft provide airbags either positioned in the back of each seat (so as to deploy for the passenger sitting behind that seat) or in the seat belts. (For example, passengers sitting in the front seat or bulkhead in the aircraft do not have a seat in front of them, so in this instance, the airbag may be positioned in the passenger seat belt.) Passenger vehicles may also contain airbags in side locations, which can inflate between an occupant and the vehicle door or the vehicle window or wall.
Typically, sensors deploy one or more airbags in an impact zone at variable rates based on the type and severity of impact. Most airbags are designed to only inflate in moderate to severe frontal crashes. Airbags are normally designed with the intention of supplementing the protection of an occupant who is correctly restrained with a seatbelt.
Airbags are typically designed as large bags that require a large volume of gas for their inflation. They are typically round in shape, or peanut shaped, examples of which are shown in
Since their invention in the early 1950's and introduction in the mid-1970's, airbags have continually been improved upon. However, further airbag improvements are desirable, including airbags that have varying designs for varying types of seating arrangements in passenger vehicles.
Embodiments of the invention described herein thus provide airbags that are designed to use a lower inflation volume than traditional airbags. In one embodiment, this is accomplished by providing a plurality of tubular airbags secured to one another.
Rather than requiring a large volume of gas to fill a large round airbag, it is desirable to design an airbag that reduces the global inflated volume of the airbag. This can require less gas to inflate the bag, allowing the bag to fill more quickly and efficiently. It can also reduce the overall weight of the total airbag system, by allowing use of a smaller inflator. It is also desirable to design airbags having varying shapes, and particularly, shapes that cause the airbag's inflated position to be closer to the occupant. This can improve performance of the airbag (as measured by head injury criteria) by causing the bag to be in earlier contact with the vehicle occupant. It is also desirable to provide an airbag that has a shape and design that allows it to be easier to produce and fold. These and other advantages are achieved by the tubular airbags of embodiments of the present invention. The airbags are provided as inflatable cushions that are made of a tubular shape and oriented in a particular configuration. In a specific embodiment, multiple tubular structures are positioned in a generally parallel configuration to one another.
Accordingly, embodiments of the present invention provide an airbag that has one or more tubular structures. The airbag may be associated with a seat back, such that the airbag deploys backward to support a passenger in a seat behind. Alternatively, it may be associated with a steering wheel, a side wall of a vehicle, or any other vehicle structure.
One embodiment of a tubular airbag 10 is shown in
Although the tubular structures are shown as having a rounded top surface 22 and a rounded bottom surface 24 such that they have an oval-like cross section 26, it should also be understood that tubular structures 12 may be formed as having a square, rectangular, triangular, or round or other cross section. The term “tubular” is not intended to be restrictive to a particular shape, but is instead intended to refer to a generally elongated tube-like structure that has a hollow interior that can accept a volume of inflation gas. The structure may be any shape, as long as it has a length that is greater than either its width or its height, and has an interior hollow area to accept inflation gas.
At one end of each structure 12 is an opening 20 for receiving inflation gas. In use and during a crash condition, inflation gas is immediately and rapidly pumped into each opening 20 in each structure 12 in order to cause the airbag 10 to inflate and cushion an occupant's forward momentum.
One of the benefits of designing the airbag 10 as having a plurality of tubular structures 12 that are individually inflated rather (simultaneously or one after the other) than one single airbag of the prior art is that the tubular airbag 10 requires a lower volume of gas for inflation. Thus, although the bag itself contains requires more material and may have a greater weight than a traditional airbag, the volume of the inflator gas bottle required to fill the airbag can be smaller, so that the overall system has a lower global weight. The tubular shape reduces the stress on the material, and based on the pressure formula [force=pressure/surface], a lighter and thinner material can also be used to create airbag 10. Airbag 10 also requires a smaller volume of gas to inflate than a traditional airbag that is not divided into distinct structures 12, because the use of tubular structures 12 as opposed to a large air bag reduces the total inflated volume of the airbag 10. For example, the volume of gas required to fill a traditional airbag 10 (i.e., one that is not formed by tubular structures 12) is about 20-25% less than the volume required for a traditional air bag having a similar length and width. According to the below calculation, the volume savings is about 22%:
The ratio is the following at iso head injuries performance:
3D bag (which refers to a traditional round airbag) volume is Length×Width×Height so L×W×W when width=height.
By contrast, the tubular airbag structure provides the following volume calculations which compare a parallelepiped-shaped air bag to the tubular airbags described herein:
(with heights equivalent) 4×Length×(Tube diameter×Tube diameter×3.14/4)=As tube diameter is equivalent to half of the Width so 4×L×(W/2×W/2×3.14/4)=L×W×W×3.14/4 so for the same bag behavior in term of protection, there is −22% volume less to inflate (0.785−1*100%) so L×W×W×0.785 (tubular bag volume)<L×W×W (3d bag volume). A schematic of these comparative dimensions is shown in
The airbag also allows for the use of a smaller inflator volume compared to the bag performance because of the tube behavior in the very early phase of the occupant body displacement, as shown in FIGS. 9 and 13-14. The tubes may not, and need not, inflate completely in order for the airbag 10 to be effective, and this can reduce some of the inflation volume required as well.
Inflation of each tubular structure is manageable in a number of ways. For example, the inflation gas may enter each tube individually, such that one fill tube can be directly connected to the inflator while the other structures are filled through this first tube. The size of the filling opening on the structure and/or the fill tube may be designed to optimize and manage a desired filling sequence. For example, a bigger opening or a bigger tube is quicker to fill; a smaller opening or a smaller tube is slower to fill. In the embodiment where the tubular structures are provided in a stacked configuration, it may be desirable to first inflate the upper layer of structures, followed by inflation of the lower layer of structures. There may be one, two, more fill tubes used.
A further benefit of the airbag system 10 is that if, for some reason, one of the openings 20 becomes clogged or unworkable or if one of the structures 12 becomes torn or otherwise damaged, there is at least one other tubular structure 12 connected thereto that can still be inflated and provide at least a portion of the desired cushioning effect.
In one particular embodiment, four tubular structures 12 may be sewn to one another along their length L in order to form a roughly rectangular airbag, as shown in
The structures 12 are secured to one another via a securing system 28. Securing system 28 may be formed of any appropriate means, including but not limited to one or more straps 30 configured to secure structures 12 to one another, stitching or sewing the structures 12 to one another, using glue or tape or any other appropriate adhesive or bonding material to secure the structures 12 to one another, using a separate element to secure the structures 12 to one another, or any combination thereof. The general goal of securing system is to cause the airbag structures 12 to extend as a unit once inflated. It is preferable that the structures do not spread apart upon inflation, lest they not be effective at catching the vehicle occupant's forward momentum
In the embodiment shown in
Referring now to
Another form of a securing system 28 is shown in
One example of a crash sequence showing this enhanced support is illustrated in
This embodiment uses even less gas for inflation of the airbag 10 because of the shortened length of the structure(s) positioned at upper layer 44. For example, a tubular airbag comprised of four tubular structures 12 (with the height and width remaining the same, but having varied lengths) is about 20-25% and by certain calculations, about 22% volume less to inflate than a traditional parallelepiped-shaped airbag. This saving in volume allows the use of a smaller inflator which gives a weight reduction of almost 18% in the gas inflator weight.
The tubular airbags 10 described herein are easier to fold than traditional airbags, as they lay flat. This allows for an accurate folding and a lower package volume. The airbags are also able to be sewn with flat sewing seams, with junction of the tube structures by side tethers or straps. Examples of potential folding and sewing configurations are illustrated by
In order to manufacture tubular airbag 10, tubular structures 12 may be individually formed and secured to one another using any of the various securing systems 28 described herein. Alternatively, a top layer of material may be secured to a bottom layer of material with a seam extending the length thereof at the half way point, in order to create two side-by-side structures 12.
In use, the tubular airbag system is packed into a compartment or opening in a seat back, a steering wheel, or any other component in the vehicle from which an airbag may deploy. There is provided a system for attaching the tubular airbag system to an interior component of a vehicle. The attaching system may include one or more tubes 38 extending from an opening in each tubular structures which are intended to attach to an inflation source.
More specifically, the method for installing an airbag in a seat may include providing the tubular airbag system, including a system for securing the plurality of tubular structures to one another; providing a system for detecting a crash condition and causing the airbag to deploy; providing an inflation system for inflating the airbag; securing the airbag to the seat; securing the system for detecting a crash condition at a location that enables it to communicate with an activate the airbag upon a crash condition; and securing the system for inflating the airbag to the opening for receiving inflation gas.
Changes and modifications, additions and deletions may be made to the structures and methods recited above and shown in the drawings without departing from the scope or spirit of the invention and the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/545,641, filed Oct. 11, 2011, titled “Tubular Airbag,” the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61545641 | Oct 2011 | US |