Neck moment response characterization of restrained child occupant at standard test impact speed 24.4 km/h

The effects of bullet vehicle crash impact angle, child restraint system design and restraint harness slack at standard test side impact speed of 24.4 km/h (15 mph) on moments sustained at the neck by a three year old child is investigated. A statistical methodology employing the Design of Experimen...

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Published in:Research Journal of Applied Sciences, Engineering and Technology
Main Author: Shasthri S.; Kausalyah V.; Shah Q.H.; Abdullah K.A.; Idres M.M.; Wong S.V.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Maxwell Science Publications 2014
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84907150811&doi=10.19026%2frjaset.8.947&partnerID=40&md5=5bdfa12daa3cd00e95e019a5ad3f2f1c
id 2-s2.0-84907150811
spelling 2-s2.0-84907150811
Shasthri S.; Kausalyah V.; Shah Q.H.; Abdullah K.A.; Idres M.M.; Wong S.V.
Neck moment response characterization of restrained child occupant at standard test impact speed 24.4 km/h
2014
Research Journal of Applied Sciences, Engineering and Technology
8
1
10.19026/rjaset.8.947
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84907150811&doi=10.19026%2frjaset.8.947&partnerID=40&md5=5bdfa12daa3cd00e95e019a5ad3f2f1c
The effects of bullet vehicle crash impact angle, child restraint system design and restraint harness slack at standard test side impact speed of 24.4 km/h (15 mph) on moments sustained at the neck by a three year old child is investigated. A statistical methodology employing the Design of Experiments is adopted in this study whereby a Latin Hypercube Sampling is chosen as the experiment design. Mathematical models are built using the Response Surface Method based on simulation results whereby, good fitness is achieved. The singular and cross interactive effect of each predictor on the neck moment is analyzed. The number of significant parameters affecting the Neck Moment is shown to be largest for wide impact angles (ϕ=60°). The vehicle impact angle parameter is revealed to be the largely the most sensitive parameter and on which all the other remaining parameters are highly dependent on. An ideal safe range for low neck moments has been established to be within ϕ angles 42° and 60°. The vehicle impact angle parameter is shown to be proportional to neck moments for wide impact angles, while it behaves inversely proportional to neck moments for narrow impact angles. The other parameters are generally found to be moderately significant only for wide impact angles. The harness friction coefficient is shown to hold relatively very little influence on neck moments. © Maxwell Scientific Organization, 2014.
Maxwell Science Publications
20407459
English
Article
All Open Access; Hybrid Gold Open Access
author Shasthri S.; Kausalyah V.; Shah Q.H.; Abdullah K.A.; Idres M.M.; Wong S.V.
spellingShingle Shasthri S.; Kausalyah V.; Shah Q.H.; Abdullah K.A.; Idres M.M.; Wong S.V.
Neck moment response characterization of restrained child occupant at standard test impact speed 24.4 km/h
author_facet Shasthri S.; Kausalyah V.; Shah Q.H.; Abdullah K.A.; Idres M.M.; Wong S.V.
author_sort Shasthri S.; Kausalyah V.; Shah Q.H.; Abdullah K.A.; Idres M.M.; Wong S.V.
title Neck moment response characterization of restrained child occupant at standard test impact speed 24.4 km/h
title_short Neck moment response characterization of restrained child occupant at standard test impact speed 24.4 km/h
title_full Neck moment response characterization of restrained child occupant at standard test impact speed 24.4 km/h
title_fullStr Neck moment response characterization of restrained child occupant at standard test impact speed 24.4 km/h
title_full_unstemmed Neck moment response characterization of restrained child occupant at standard test impact speed 24.4 km/h
title_sort Neck moment response characterization of restrained child occupant at standard test impact speed 24.4 km/h
publishDate 2014
container_title Research Journal of Applied Sciences, Engineering and Technology
container_volume 8
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.19026/rjaset.8.947
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84907150811&doi=10.19026%2frjaset.8.947&partnerID=40&md5=5bdfa12daa3cd00e95e019a5ad3f2f1c
description The effects of bullet vehicle crash impact angle, child restraint system design and restraint harness slack at standard test side impact speed of 24.4 km/h (15 mph) on moments sustained at the neck by a three year old child is investigated. A statistical methodology employing the Design of Experiments is adopted in this study whereby a Latin Hypercube Sampling is chosen as the experiment design. Mathematical models are built using the Response Surface Method based on simulation results whereby, good fitness is achieved. The singular and cross interactive effect of each predictor on the neck moment is analyzed. The number of significant parameters affecting the Neck Moment is shown to be largest for wide impact angles (ϕ=60°). The vehicle impact angle parameter is revealed to be the largely the most sensitive parameter and on which all the other remaining parameters are highly dependent on. An ideal safe range for low neck moments has been established to be within ϕ angles 42° and 60°. The vehicle impact angle parameter is shown to be proportional to neck moments for wide impact angles, while it behaves inversely proportional to neck moments for narrow impact angles. The other parameters are generally found to be moderately significant only for wide impact angles. The harness friction coefficient is shown to hold relatively very little influence on neck moments. © Maxwell Scientific Organization, 2014.
publisher Maxwell Science Publications
issn 20407459
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Hybrid Gold Open Access
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
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