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Airbag
- Airbag
inflation - Airbag
safety - Airbag
deactivation
How
An Airbag Works?
For years, the trusty seat belt provided the
sole form of passive restraint in our cars.
There were debates about their safety,
especially relating to children, but over time,
much of the country adopted mandatory seat-belt
laws. Statistics have shown that the use of seat
belts has saved thousands of lives that
might have been lost in collisions.
Like seat belts, the concept of the
airbag - a soft pillow to land against in a
crash -- has been around for many years. The
first patent on an inflatable crash-landing
device for airplanes was filed during World War
II. In the 1980s, the first commercial airbags
appeared in automobiles.
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Since model year 1998, all new cars
have been required to have airbags
on both driver and passenger sides.(Light
trucks came under the rule in 1999.) To
date, statistics show that airbags
reduce the risk of dying in a direct
frontal crash by about 30 percent. Then
came seat-mounted and door-mounted side airbags.
Today, some cars go far beyond having dual
airbags to having six or even eight airbags.
Having evoked some of the same controversy
that surrounded seat-belt use in its early
years, airbags are the subject of
serious government and industry research
and tests. Airbags
inflate, or deploy, quickly - faster than
the blink of an eye. Imagine taking one second
and splitting it into one thousand parts. In the
first 15 to 20 milliseconds, airbag
sensors detect the crash and then
send an electrical signal to fire the airbags.
Typically a squib, which is a small explosive
device, ignites a propellant, usually sodium
azide.
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The azide burns with tremendous speed,
generating nitrogen, which inflates the airbags.
Within 45 to 55 milliseconds the airbag is
supposed to be fully inflated. Within 75 to 80
milliseconds, the airbag is deflated and the
event is over.
When airbags
work properly, they dramatically reduce the
chance of death or serious injury. However, the
speed with which airbags inflate generates
tremendous forces. Passengers in the way of an
improperly designed airbag can be killed or
significantly injured. Unnecessary injuries also
occur when airbags inflate in relatively
minor crashes when they're not needed.
Laws
Of
Motion
See
Main Article Laws Of Motion
Before looking at specifics, let's review our
knowledge of the laws of motion. First,
we know that moving objects have momentum (the
product of the mass and the velocity of an
object). Unless an outside force acts on an
object, the object will continue to move at its
present speed and direction. Cars consist of
several objects, including the vehicle itself,
loose objects in the car and, of course,
passengers. If these objects are not restrained,
they will continue moving at whatever speed the
car is traveling at, even if the car is stopped
by a collision.

Stopping an object's momentum requires force
acting over a period of time. When a car
crashes, the force required to stop an object is
very great because the car's momentum has
changed instantly while the passengers' has not
-- there is not much time to work with. The goal
of any supplemental restraint system is to help
stop the passenger while doing as little damage
to him or her as possible.
What an airbag wants to do is to slow the
passenger's speed to zero with little or no
damage. The constraints that it has to work
within are huge. The airbag has the space
between the passenger and the steering wheel or
dashboard and a fraction of a second to work
with. Even that tiny amount of space and time is
valuable, however, if the system can slow the
passenger evenly rather than forcing an abrupt
halt to his or her motion.
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Airbag
- Airbag
inflation - Airbag
safety - Airbag
deactivation
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