A new landing impact attenuation seat in manned spacecraft biologically-inspired by felids

  • Hui Yu
  • , Zhiqiang Zhang
  • , Hua Liu
  • , Jialing Yang*
  • , Lili Wang
  • , Liming Yang
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Abstract When manned spacecraft comes back to the earth, it relies on the impact attenuation seat to protect astronauts from injuries during landing phase. Hence, the seat needs to transfer impact load, as small as possible, to the crew. However, there is little room left for traditional seat to improve further. Herein, a new seat system biologically-inspired by felids' landing is proposed. Firstly, a series of experiments was carried out on cats and tigers, in which they were trained to jump down voluntarily from different heights. Based on the ground reaction forces combined with kinematics, the experiment indicated that felids' landing after self-initial jump was a multi-step impact attenuation process and the new seat was inspired by this. Then the construction and work process of new seat were redesigned to realize the multi-step impact attenuation. The dynamic response of traditional and new seat is analyzed under the identical conditions and the results show that the new concept seat can significantly weaken the occupant overload in two directions compared with that of traditional seat. As a consequence, the risk of injury evaluated for spinal and head is also lowered, meaning a higher level of protection which is especially beneficial to the debilitated astronaut.

Original languageEnglish
Article number431
Pages (from-to)434-446
Number of pages13
JournalChinese Journal of Aeronautics
Volume28
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Apr 2015

Keywords

  • Astronautics
  • Bionics
  • Impact attenuation
  • Landing
  • Overload
  • Seat

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