![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||
Case Studies Crash Course in Data Management Speeds Up Huge Simulation Task
A typical crash dummy family used to assess the effects of automobile collisions on different sexes and ages of humans. Crash dummies' lives are nasty, brutish and short. Before they ever get behind the wheel of a car, their heads, chests and limbs are removed, probed, dropped and struck. They are reassembled, dabbed with marking paint and slapped on either side of the head with calibration stickers to help engineers evaluate slow-motion films of crashes. During a test, crash data is recorded in a temporary repository in the dummy's chest, then downloaded to a computer after. If any dummy part is damaged or fails, it can be swapped for an identical one, but a dummy can only be crash tested a certain number of times before its functional lifespan comes to an end. Still, crash dummies have served their purpose well: cars today are much safer than those of half a century ago. To mark the 50th anniversary of the formation of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, the IIHS filmed a 40 mph frontal offset crash between a 1959 Chevrolet Bel Air and a 2009 Chevrolet Malibu. Thanks to improved safety standards, the crash dummy in the new car fared dramatically better than the one in the older model. View the video at http://www.iihs.org/video.aspx/info/50thcrash The idea for the automotive crash test dummy first came to life in the 1950s when U.S. Air Force flight surgeon Col. John Stapp realized that more of his fighter pilots were dying in car crashes than from accidents in their hi-tech jet aircraft. The Stapp Car Crash Conferences started that decade and continue today as a venue to share information on the latest research and advancements for improving vehicle crashworthiness and occupant safety. A major challenge in the ongoing development of physical crash dummies is the need to reasonably represent how the human body responds in an automotive accident. The ultimate goal of crash dummy research is to aid in creating design improvements for both vehicles and occupant restraint systems to reduce injuries and save lives. Energy absorbing crumple zones and other structural innovations do help protect occupants during car crashes. The addition of air bags, combined with a properly worn lap/shoulder belt, reduces driver deaths by 61 percent in a frontal crash, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). But car manufacturers are now also legally obligated to certify the effects of crash events on the humans involved. As a result, crash dummies for front-impact ("Hybrid"), side-impact (SID) and rear-impact (RID) have been developed, with engineers from around the world contributing over the years to their evolution. Today, physical crash dummies are a valuable part of every automotive OEM's product design, development and testing arsenal. Smart investment, big price tag
Automotive companies and government organizations continue to collaborate toward the acceptance of international safety standards (a "WorldSID" project is now underway) and harmonize methods of testing as the market for each country's vehicles becomes increasingly global. But physical test dummies are only a part of the crash and safety certification process. As computer-aided engineering software and computing resources rapidly advance, there is increasing emphasis being placed on developing ever-more-accurate virtual crash dummies. Simulating the crash simulator
Since the goal of simulating a simulator of the complex human body is to closely represent reality, the resulting data must correlate well with physical crash test results. So standardization of FEA models is critical: Each virtual dummy must exhibit responses to crash impact loads and accelerations in a precise, repeatable manner that mirrors what happens to its corresponding physical crash dummy. What's more, the simulation must continue to run smoothly as each new and improved version of a physical crash dummy comes on the market and as each new version of crash simulation software is released. Simulation software companies go to great lengths to validate the consistency and accuracy of their software in a process called qualification. In the case of creating a new virtual crash dummy or updating an existing one, the software qualification process involves evaluating large quantities of FEA data, gathered from multiple simulations of various crash scenarios, run on different versions of simulation software and, in turn, correlated with new physical test data. Data, data everywhere A typical FEA dummy model will have about 100,000 elements, 150,000 nodes and 500,000 degrees of freedom. "To ensure, within engineering tolerances, that you get the same results from the virtual dummies as from the physical tests of the real ones, we have to run component, sub-assembly and full-model tests on each one," says Sankar.
A component test is used to evaluate an individual FEA model of a dummy neck being bent, a lumbar spine being shoved sideways, or a head being dropped on a hard surface. A sub-assembly test assesses the stresses on a full rib cage model hit from the side by a pendulum, with the ribs being individually deformed and possibly intruding into the body cavity. And a full-body test incorporates an entire dummy model being hit from the side by a virtual "solid" barrier or subjected to a simulated sled test. Different testing standards (NHTSA, IIHS, etc.) require a variety of tests. "With 30 to 60 of these validation tests per dummy model, we end up with a very large number of outputs to generate and then compare," says Sankar. Manual qualification slows down the engineering team Before they could even begin the analysis, Scarlat's group had to create their databases by manually modifying each of the previous validation test responses to add proper filtering (which has to meet industry standards, such as J211 or ISO 6487) to the variables so that the results between different versions of Abaqus could be compared. Next, the engineers had to manually launch and run the simulations for the 30-60 tests in the current and previous versions of Abaqus (usually four or five total). Once they completed the various manual analyses, the team then had to run a post-processing step to generate the curve plots describing the analysis results. The amount of data continues to multiply at this point because the results of a single FEA analysis of dummy rib cage intrusions, for example, could produce up to 200 output variables (forces, displacements, etc.) per test. Finally, a second post-processing step would take the analysis curves, two at a time, and generate statistical comparisons to quantify the agreement between the same variables in different versions of Abaqus. "So in terms of data you could have 60 tests multiplied by 200 variables multiplied by five different versions of Abaqus," says Scarlat. "This was a lot of manual work. To meet our deadlines, we really needed to improve the efficiency of the entire process." SLM brings the power of PLM to Virtual Crash Dummy Qualification How'd they do that? SIMULIA SLM leverages Dassault Systèmes' ENOVIA product lifecycle management (PLM) solution with SIMULIA's simulation expertise. Using SLM as both a database and a process controller, the engineers could save and manage their simulation data, reuse simulations, retain performance metrics, protect intellectual property and shorten design cycles. They used Isight software within SLM as an add-on tool for driving automation of the data (Isight also has powerful optimization capabilities, which were not needed in this case). The crash dummy qualification team used SLM as the underlying driver for running each of the three main dummy qualification tasks (preprocessing, analysis and postprocessing) sequentially. SLM automatically exported all the necessary files from its database for each task (activity). It then automatically imported back into its database any specified result files after the activity was run.
Isight automates the qualification process further "Automating our tasks was a big help," says Scarlat. "No user intervention was needed during the complicated workflow execution, which resulted in a significant reduction of our process time for the whole project." His team qualified five FTSS dummies in the first year of using the new workflow—taking about the same number of man-hours needed to finish only one dummy qualification project before. The automobile safety engineering world is getting ever closer to the perfect crash dummy. Hybrid IV, also known as THOR, is a dummy currently under development with biomechanical and measurement enhancements that will generate more data than ever. "With such complicated, data-rich FEA in the pipeline, the use of SLM and Isight to automate and manage it all will be even more crucial to the efficiency of our engineering team," says Sankar. Automating the Virtual Crash Dummy Qualification Process
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
| Parker Group, Inc. | 394 Angell Street | Providence, Rhode Island 02906 | (401) 272-1510 | team@parkergroup.com | |||||||||||||||||||||