Anisotropic polyethersulfone foam for bicycle helmet liners to reduce rotational acceleration during oblique impact

Yasmine Mosleh, Kelly Vanden Bosche, Bart Depreitere, Jos Vander Sloten, Ignaas Verpoest, Jan Ivens

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

17 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Although current standard bicycle helmets protect cyclists against linear acceleration, they still lack sufficient protection against rotational acceleration during oblique impact events. Rotational acceleration is correlated with serious traumatic brain injuries such as acute subdural haematoma and thus should be minimized. This study proposes using highly anisotropic polyethersulfone foam for bicycle helmet liners in order to limit the rotational acceleration. Helmet prototypes, made of polyethersulfone foam with cell anisotropy direction perpendicular to the head, have been produced and compared to a standard commercial helmet. Standard helmets consist of expanded polystyrene foam. Oblique impact tests were performed to measure both linear and rotational accelerations and impact pulse duration. Results demonstrate that the peak rotational acceleration of the polyethersulfone prototype helmet showed a decrease of around 40% compared to the reference expanded polystyrene helmet. Moreover, the peak linear acceleration showed an average decrease of about 37%. Upon impact, the polyethersulfone helmet showed improved head injury protection when analysed based on global biomechanical head injury criteria such as HIC15 and HICrot as well as generalized acceleration model for brain injury threshold, brain injury criterion and head impact power, with a predicted sixfold decrease in likelihood of concussion.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)851-861
JournalInstitution of Mechanical Engineers. Proceedings. Part H: Journal of Engineering in Medicine
Volume231
Issue number9
Publication statusPublished - 2017
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Bicycle helmet, rotational acceleration, traumatic brain injury, oblique impact, anisotropic foam

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