Modeling the Human Body/Seat System in a Vibration Environment
Author:
Rosen Jacob1, Arcan Mircea2
Affiliation:
1. Department of Electrical Engineering, Box 352500, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195-2500 2. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Department of Solid Mechanics, Materials and Structures, Faculty of Engineering, Tel-Aviv University, Ramat-Aviv, 69978, Tel-Aviv, Israel
Abstract
The vibration environment is a common man-made artificial surrounding with which humans have a limited tolerance to cope due to their body dynamics. This research studied the dynamic characteristics of a seated human body/seat system in a vibration environment. The main result is a multi degrees of freedom lumped parameter model that synthesizes two basic dynamics: (i) global human dynamics, the apparent mass phenomenon, including a systematic set of the model parameters for simulating various conditions like body posture, backrest, footrest, muscle tension, and vibration directions, and (ii) the local human dynamics, represented by the human pelvis/vibrating seat contact, using a cushioning interface. The model and its selected parameters successfully described the main effects of the apparent mass phenomenon compared to experimental data documented in the literature. The model provided an analytical tool for human body dynamics research. It also enabled a primary tool for seat and cushioning design. The model was further used to develop design guidelines for a composite cushion using the principle of quasi-uniform body/seat contact force distribution. In terms of evenly distributing the contact forces, the best result for the different materials and cushion geometries simulated in the current study was achieved using a two layer shaped geometry cushion built from three materials. Combining the geometry and the mechanical characteristics of a structure under large deformation into a lumped parameter model enables successful analysis of the human/seat interface system and provides practical results for body protection in dynamic environment.
Publisher
ASME International
Subject
Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering
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