Combined shear-compression test to characterize foams under oblique loading for bicycle helmets. Paper presented at the 16th European Conference on Composite Materials ECCM, Seville, Spain, June 22-26, 2014.

Author(s)
Mosleh, Y. Vanden Bossche, K. Vander Sloten, J. Verpoest, I. & Ivens, J.
Year
Abstract

Cyclists during bicycle traffic accidents, are prone to oblique impact which leads to rotational accelerations. Rotational acceleration is known to cause significant brain injuries, and should be minimized. Foam materials inside bicycle helmets undergo a combination of shear and compression loads during oblique impact. Therefore, developing an apparatus and a test method which can apply a combination of shear and compression loads to the foam at the same time is of great importance. This testing method has a broad application which is not only limited to the foams for bicycle helmet applications but has general relevance to sandwich core materials in structural composites. In this paper, the shear-compression behavior of different types of foams under different angles, particularly 15, 45 and 60 is investigated and compared to the standard EPS foam used in bicycle helmets. Shear stresses in anisotropic PES foams under different angles in the combined shear-compression test were lower than for standard EPS, which is favourable because they lead to high rotational acceleration. The peak rotational and translational accelerations of the PES prototype helmets were measured by a rotational impact test set-up and showed a dramatic decrease of around 40% compared to the reference EPS helmet, however at increased pulse duration. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20150020 ST [electronic version only]
Source

In: Proceedings of the 16th European Conference on Composite Materials ECCM, Seville, Spain, June 22-26, 2014, 8 p., 7 ref.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.