Simulation of rear end impact with a full body human model with a detailed neck: Role of passive muscle properties and initial seating posture

2001-06-0224

06/04/2001

Event
International Technical Conference on Enhanced Safety of Vehicles
Authors Abstract
Content
To study the mechanics of the neck during rear end impact, in this paper an existing global human body model and an existing detailed submodel of the neck were combined into a new model. The combined model is validated with responses of volunteers and post mortem human subjects (PMHSs) subjected to rear end impacts of resp 5g and 12g. The volunteers (n=7, 7 tests) were seated on a standard car seat with head restraint, while the PMHSs (n=3, 6 tests) were placed on a rigid seat without head restraint. The model shows good agreement with the PMHS responses when muscle tensile stiffness is increased towards published PMHS tissue properties. For the volunteer simulations, initial seating posture and head restraint position were found to strongly influence the model response. More leaning forward (increasing of horizontal distance head head restraint) results in larger T1 and head motions. A correct vertical position of the head restraint (top of head in one line with top of head restraint) reduces the head extension angle. The model has the potential to study injury mechanisms.
Meta TagsDetails
Pages
12
Citation
van der Horst, M., Bovendeerd, P., Happee, R., Wismans, J. et al., "Simulation of rear end impact with a full body human model with a detailed neck: Role of passive muscle properties and initial seating posture," SAE Technical Paper 2001-06-0224, 2001, .
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jun 4, 2001
Product Code
2001-06-0224
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English