Acceleration Amplification in Safety Belt Buckle Systems

Author:

Herbst Brian1,Meyer Steven E.1,Forrest Stephen1,Sances Anthony2,Kumaresan Srirangam2

Affiliation:

1. Safety Analysis and Forensic Engineering, Goleta, CA

2. University of California at Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA

Abstract

Multi-planar rollover accidents report belt usage rates that are noted to be significantly lower than that of planar crash modes.1 One explanation for this dramatic difference in reported belt usage in rollovers as compared to planar crashes is that highway patrol officers often conclude that an ejection would not have occurred had the occupant been belted. Restrained occupants can be ejected from the vehicle if the seat belts fail to restrain occupants as a result of belt spool out or buckle unlatching.2,3 Previous studies have documented the susceptibility of certain safety belt buckles to inertially unlatch.4,5,6,7 Under sufficient vertical accelerations, top button safety belt buckles have inertially unlatched in testing which would obviously negate the safety belts ability to restrain the occupant. This study expands on the mechanisms that could lead to inertial release under vertical loading in safety belt buckle systems with stiff attachments to the vehicle floor. An audio transducer was attached to a vehicle floorpan to induce accelerations at variable frequency and amplitude. Accelerations were recorded at the floorpan and safety belt buckle body simultaneously. Accelerations measured at the buckle body were up to 13 times greater than the accelerations measured at the floor pan for frequencies up to 8.5 kHz. The present study provides a first step to better understand the injury biomechanics by quantifying the accelerations at the floor pan and safety belt buckle.

Publisher

ASMEDC

Cited by 1 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. Dynamic analysis of seatbelt systems with anti-inertial release mechanisms;International Journal of Automotive Technology;2008-10

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