NEWS
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Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft - EU project APROSYS
A car body that thinks intelligently and protects its occupants at the
crucial moment has been every driver’s dream for a long time.
Research scientists in an EU project have developed an intelligent
side-impact protection system that dramatically reduces the risk of
injury.
One more second until collision. The cameras integrated in the doors
have long identified the car that will cause the accident. Radar
sensors in the car wings measure how far away the other car still is.
200 milliseconds before the crash, the new side-impact protection
system is activated. The occupants are reliably protected at the
crucial moment.
The intelligent side-impact protection system is a product of the EU
project APROSYS – short for Advanced Protection Systems. The
technology was developed by Fraunhofer researchers in cooperation with
various universities, car manufacturers and suppliers. “Our goal
was to improve the active crash safety of motor vehicles – that
is, to adapt the technical properties of the car body in such a way
that it absorbs energy at the crucial moment and thus protects the
occupants,” says project manager Björn Seipel of the
Fraunhofer Institute for Structural Durability and System Reliability
LBF.
But how do you get the car body to change its properties? And how does
the car know when its occupants need protection? The researchers have
devised a kind of sixth sense for cars that anticipates accidents and
emits the necessary impulse to activate the side-impact protection
system. Stereo cameras and radar sensors continually scan the
environment, and a central computer analyzes the data. “During
the journey, the system has to distinguish moving objects –
meaning other cars that could potentially cause an accident –
from stationary objects such as houses or trees,” explains Dr.
Dieter Willersinn of the Fraunhofer Institute for Information and Data
Processing IITB. His team has developed a software program capable of
predicting a lateral collision just in time – about 200
milliseconds before the crash. The impulse from the central computer
releases a surge of electricity that heats a wire made of a shape
memory alloy. This wire is the actual trigger. “We opted for this
solution because it is faster than any conventional solenoid
switch,” says Seipel. The heat bends the wire, which then
releases a spring. The spring slackens and pushes a steel bolt, which
is integrated in the seat, towards the door. At the same time a stable
metal body in the door is brought into position to support the steel
bolt. “The system of the bolt and the metal box stabilizes the
car door and absorbs energy on collision,” explains Seipel. To
prove that the new side-impact protection system actually works in a
real crash situation, he will carry out a crash test in Spain on March
7.
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