Experimental study of the mechanical response of a physical human surrogate thoracic model impacted by a rubber ball

Author:

Yan Wenmin,Yao Xuefeng,Wang YaoShu,Jin Yongxi,Wei Wei

Abstract

Abstract A physical human surrogate thoracic model was developed using biosimulant materials and the same anthropometry as a healthy adult male, and ballistic tests targeting the physical thoracic model were conducted using a rubber ball with a diameter of 16 mm at low (85-90 m/s), moderate (110-115 m/s), and high (130-135 m/s) velocities. The mechanical response to impact was recorded with sensors embedded into the organs. The internal organs pressure waves exhibited blast-like characteristics for the physical mode. Three parameters of initial pressure in organ were determined from the measured data: internal organs maximum pressure (Pmax), internal organs maximum pressure impulse (PImax), and the internal organs pressure gradient (dP/dt). The three parameters showed the same trend for the three different impact velocities, and these results represented a significant step in developing an understanding of the energy transfer characteristics of ballistic impacts to the human thorax. The results demonstrate the discriminating abilities of the model between threat levels, impact velocities and impact locations. It is found the first time to construct a physical human surrogate thoracic model dedicated to study the mechanism of the blunt injury impacted by the less-lethal ammunition, and the results of this research provided the function of a physical surrogate model of the human thorax which can transfer energy and propagate pressure waves during rubber bullet impacts. The model could be used to evaluate the efficiency of less-lethal ammunition before using it in the course of law enforcement, and the model provides a tool for forensic verification and validation.

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy

Cited by 5 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Developing Rib Bone Surrogates for High Dynamic Impact Assessment with Additive Manufacturing and Post-mortem Human Subjects (PMHS)-Based Evaluation;Human Factors and Mechanical Engineering for Defense and Safety;2024-04-04

2. Review of non-penetrating ballistic testing techniques for protection assessment: From biological data to numerical and physical surrogates;Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part H: Journal of Engineering in Medicine;2024-02-28

3. Sleeping position detection based on multi-domain features of ballistocardiogram;2024 4th International Conference on Neural Networks, Information and Communication (NNICE);2024-01-19

4. The Use of Human Surrogate for the Assessment of Ballistic Impacts on the Thorax;Conference Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Mechanics Series;2024

5. A new biomechanical FE model for blunt thoracic impact;Frontiers in Bioengineering and Biotechnology;2023-03-22

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