Publication

Thoracic Injury Risk as a Function of Crash Severity - Car-to-Car Side Impact Tests with WorldSID Compared to Real-life Crashes

Side airbags reduce the risk of fatal injury by approximately 30%. Due to limited real-life data the risk reducing effect for serious injury has not yet been established. Since side airbags are mainly designed and validated for crash severities used in available test procedures little is known regarding the protective effect when severity increases. The objective of this study was to understand for which crash severities AIS3+ thorax occupant protection in car-tocar nearside collisions need to and can be improved. The aim was fulfilled by means of real life data, for older cars without side airbag, and a series of car-to-car tests performed with the WorldSID 50%-ile in modern and older cars at different impact speeds. The real life data showed that the risk of AIS3+ injury was highest for the thorax followed by the pelvis and head. For both non-senior and senior occupants, most thorax injuries were sustained at lateral delta-v from 20 km/h to 40 km/h. In this severity range, senior occupants were found to have approximately four times higher risk of thoracic injury than non-senior occupants. The crash tests at lateral impact speed 55 km/h (delta-v 32 km/h) confirmed the improved performance at severities represented in current legal and rating tests. The structural integrity of the modern car impacted at 70 km/h showed a potential for improved side impact protection by interior countermeasures.

Author(s)
Cecilia Sunnevång, Erik Rosén, Ola Boström, Ulf Lechelt
Research area
Human body protection
Publication type
Conference paper
Published in
"Annals of Advances in Automotive Medicine - 54th Annual Scientific Conference", October 2010, 54:159-168
Project
Improved side impact protection in the traffic of the future - car to car full vehicle crashes with WorldSID
Year of publication
2010