Head Impact Modeling to Support a Rotational Combat Helmet Drop Test

Author:

Terpsma Ryan1,Carlsen Rika Wright2,Szalkowski Ron3,Malave Sushant3,Fawzi Alice Lux4,Franck Christian5,Hovey Chad1

Affiliation:

1. Terminal Ballistics Technology Department 5421, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM 87185, USA

2. Department of Engineering, Robert Morris University, Moon Township, PA 15108, USA

3. Team Wendy LLC, Cleveland, OH 44110, USA

4. School of Engineering, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, USA

5. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI 53706, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Introduction The Advanced Combat Helmet (ACH) military specification (mil-spec) provides blunt impact acceleration criteria that must be met before use by the U.S. warfighter. The specification, which requires a helmeted magnesium Department of Transportation (DOT) headform to be dropped onto a steel hemispherical target, results in a translational headform impact response. Relative to translations, rotations of the head generate higher brain tissue strains. Excessive strain has been implicated as a mechanical stimulus leading to traumatic brain injury (TBI). We hypothesized that the linear constrained drop test method of the ACH specification underreports the potential for TBI. Materials and Methods To establish a baseline of translational acceleration time histories, we conducted linear constrained drop tests based on the ACH specification and then performed simulations of the same to verify agreement between experiment and simulation. We then produced a high-fidelity human head digital twin and verified that biological tissue responses matched experimental results. Next, we altered the ACH experimental configuration to use a helmeted Hybrid III headform, a freefall cradle, and an inclined anvil target. This new, modified configuration allowed both a translational and a rotational headform response. We applied this experimental rotation response to the skull of our human digital twin and compared brain deformation relative to the translational baseline. Results The modified configuration produced brain strains that were 4.3 times the brain strains from the linear constrained configuration. Conclusions We provide a scientific basis to motivate revision of the ACH mil-spec to include a rotational component, which would enhance the test’s relevance to TBI arising from severe head impacts.

Funder

the Office of Naval Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

Reference40 articles.

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