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Journal Article

Citation

Ruan S, Zhao W, Li H, Cui S, He L. Int. J. Veh. Safety 2019; 11(1): 19-36.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Inderscience Publishers)

DOI

10.1504/IJVS.2019.101294

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

To test the applicability of Head Injury Criterion (HIC), three different-sized (5th, 50th, 95th percentile) finite element head models were developed from medical CT scan images of living humans. These models were scaled to generate six scaled models. The skulls of these nine models were defined as deformable and rigid bodies, respectively. It was found that both coup and contrecoup pressures decreased from the smaller head to the larger one when the skulls were deformable; while the opposite trends were found when the skulls were defined as rigid bodies. Maximum principal strains and maximum share stresses increased from the smaller head to the larger one for both deformable and rigid skulls with much larger increases in the rigid skull cases. It also found that there were larger discrepancies in intracranial responses between scaled models and the original ones, which invalidate the scaling laws used in biomechanical injury studies.

Keywords: HIC; head injury criteria; scaling laws; head sizes; intracranial responses; finite element model.


Language: en

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