Experimental Analysis of Aspirating Airbag Units

1999-01-0436

3/1/1999

Authors
Abstract
Content
Aspirating airbag modules are unique from other designs in that the gas entering the airbag is a mixture of inflator-delivered gas and ambient-temperature air entrained from the atmosphere surrounding the module. Today's sophisticated computer simulations of an airbag deployment typically require as input the mass-flow rate, chemical composition and thermal history of the gas exiting the canister and entering the airbag. While the mass-flow rate and temperature of the inflator-delivered gas can be obtained from a standard tank test, information on air entrainment into an aspirated canister is limited. The purpose of this study is to provide quantitative information about the aspirated mass-flow rate during airbag deployment. Pressure and velocity measurements are combined with high-speed photography in order to gain further insight into the relationship between the canister pressure, the rate of cabin-air entrainment and the airbag deployment. Fully instrumented, production level aspirating airbag modules serve as the principal test device.
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Citation
Lee, Y., Wang, J., Green, P., Yu, C., et al., "Experimental Analysis of Aspirating Airbag Units," International Congress & Exposition, Detroit, Michigan, United States, March 1, 1999, https://doi.org/10.4271/1999-01-0436.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
3/1/1999
Product Code
1999-01-0436
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English