Thin airbag module design for overhead applications

Land vehicles – Wheeled – Attachment

Reexamination Certificate

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Details

C280S730100

Reexamination Certificate

active

06588793

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to overhead airbag inflation systems in motor vehicles. More specifically, the invention relates to a compressible airbag module design for overhead airbag applications.
2. Description of Related Art
Inflatable airbags are well accepted for use in motor vehicles and have been credited with preventing numerous deaths and injuries. Some statistics estimate that frontal airbags reduce the fatalities in head-on collisions by 25% among drivers using seat belts and by more than 30% among unbelted drivers. Statistics further suggest that with a combination of seat belt and airbag, serious chest injuries in frontal collisions can be reduced by 65% and serious head injuries by up to 75%. Airbag use presents clear benefits and vehicle owners are frequently willing to pay the added expense for airbags.
The inclusion of inflatable safety restraint devices, or airbags, is now a legal requirement for many new vehicles. Airbags are typically installed in the steering wheel and in the instrument panel on the passenger side of a car. In the event of an accident, an electronic control unit (ECU) within the vehicle measures the abnormal deceleration via an accelerometer and triggers the ignition of an explosive charge. Expanding gases from the charge fill the airbags, which immediately inflate in front of the driver and passenger to protect them from impact against the windshield or instrument panel.
An airbag cover, also called a trim cover panel, covers a compartment containing the airbag module and may reside on a steering wheel, dashboard, vehicle door, along a vehicle roof rail, vehicle wall, or beneath the dash board. The airbag cover is typically made of a rigid plastic and may be forced open by the pressure from the deploying airbag. In deploying the airbag, it is preferable to retain the airbag cover to prevent the airbag cover from flying loose in the passenger compartment. If the airbag cover freely moves into the passenger compartment, it may injure a passenger.
Airbag apparatuses have been primarily designed for deployment in front of the torso of an occupant between the upper torso of an occupant and the instrument panel. Conventional airbags, such as driver's or passenger airbags (hereinafter referenced as the “traditional airbag”), protect the occupant's upper torso and head from colliding with a windshield or instrument panel. Traditional airbag modules for frontal occupant protection deploy from the instrument panel (passenger side) or from the steering wheel (driver side). This location has several disadvantages including poor out of position (OOP) performance and unaesthetic visible instrument panel or steering wheel tear seams.
In fact, many known airbags have poor OOP performance for occupants. These airbags tend to direct the initial deployment energy toward the expected position of the occupant. While these designs help a properly positioned occupant avoid injury, placement of the airbag too close to an OOP occupant increases the risk that the occupant will be injured by the airbag itself. The speed at which the airbags in general, and especially front impact airbags, must deploy to adequately protect people requires that they inflate with considerable speed and force. With an OOP occupant, the risk of injury dramatically increases, as the models used to calculate desired deployment are considerably different. For example, an OOP occupant is most likely not wearing a safety restraint, whereas, the expected occupant position calculations generally anticipate that the occupant is wearing a seatbelt. Without a seatbelt, the inertia of the OOP occupant keeps them moving forward towards the instrument panel and windshield. The inertial motion of the OOP occupant also amplifies the force of the impact of the OOP occupant with the airbag over a properly restrained occupant. Furthermore, because the OOP occupant may be closer to the windshield and instrument panel, the airbag has less time to be successfully deployed. This dramatically increases the likelihood that the OOP occupant will have a secondary impact with the vehicle as the airbag does not have time to be properly deployed. Accordingly, a need exists for an airbag module that also provides protection to an OOP occupant.
In addition to poor OOP performance, airbags of all types known in the art have a number of additional disadvantages. One exemplary disadvantage of traditional airbag configurations is that they are too bulky for convenient overhead installation and use within a vehicle. Some vehicles simply do not have the vertical space in the roof of the vehicle to accommodate the bulk of certain cushion members and their respective inflators, such as those necessary for traditional overhead airbag configurations. Some attempt to build an overhead compartment, but as previously discussed, the traditional cushion member of an airbag, which is the portion impacted by a vehicle occupant, must be mounted some distance from a passenger, because the airbag requires space to inflate. This distance constraint further limits the available overhead locations for installation of frontal airbag systems. Accordingly, a need also exists for a thin overhead airbag module.
Yet another disadvantage is that previously known airbags are somewhat expensive to produce and install. For example, each airbag is typically a single-use device that includes an inflation device, a monitoring device, an inflatable airbag cushion and a support structure. These individual components are typically specialized for use in the airbag and are thus relatively more expensive than off the shelf components. Furthermore deployment of the airbag typically ends the usefulness of the unit and if the vehicle is still useable, requires airbag replacement. Additionally, deployment often requires the airbag to break through tear seams in the steering wheel or instrument panel. Thus, replacement of the airbag also requires replacing the damaged instrument panel or steering wheel cover further increasing the installation cost. Accordingly, a need exists for an airbag module with reduced replacement costs.
The typical deployment mechanisms used in available airbags create other disadvantages. For example during normal operation, the monitoring device of the airbag will detect irregular acceleration or deceleration and activate the inflation device. The inflation device is typically either a pyrotechnic or gas inflator that quickly introduces filler material, such as expanding gases, into the airbag cushion. The need for fast inflation rates can increase the risk that the filler material is introduced into the airbag too fast, causing the airbag to over inflate and break. Traditionally, inflation via the introduction of filler materials pushes the inflatable airbag cushion out of the airbag support structure. Unfortunately, an inflation process that pushes the inflatable airbag out of the support structure can also damage the inflatable airbag cushion if the cushion gets caught against the support structure or another sharp edge. Occasionally, the inflatable airbag cushion is improperly packaged within the support structure or is punctured as it pushes through the support structure during deployment. The result in either case is an improper or unsuccessful deployment of the airbag, which may result in injury to the occupant. What is needed is a deployment mechanism that avoids pushing the inflatable airbag cushion out of the support structure.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The apparatus of the present invention has been developed in response to the present state of the art, and in particular, in response to the problems and needs in the art that have not yet been fully solved by currently available airbags. Thus, it is an overall objective of the present invention to provide a thin overhead airbag solution.
To achieve the foregoing objective, and in accordance with the invention as embodied and broadly described herein in the preferred embodiment, a thin overhead airbag apparatus

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