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P2.2 The kinetic energy of objects speeding up or slowing down Car design & safety

2.7 Safety Features in Vehicles

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P2.2 The kinetic energy of objects speeding up or slowing down

P2.2 The kinetic energy of objects speeding up or slowing down Car design & safetyYou should be able to:

evaluate the benefits of air bags, crumple zones, seat belts and side impact bars in cars.

evaluate the benefits of different types of braking system, such as regenerative braking.Key wordsForceEnergyWork donePowerPotential energyKinetic energyMomentumInertiaCrumple zoneSeat beltAir bag

Why do you think most car deaths occur with people aged 20-29?Around 1.3 million people die on the world's roads every year, and on the basis of current trends, deaths caused by vehicle collisions are expected to become the fifth leading cause of death by 2030.The annual number of car crash deaths in England and Wales has plunged by 41% over the past 50 years, despite the increase in drivers on the road, reveals research published in 2013 in the Emergency Medicine Journal.Why the decrease?Andrew W Fogarty, Clarence Liu. Temporal trends in the associations between age, sex, and socioeconomic status after death from motor vehicle collisions in England and Wales: 1960-2009. Emergency Medicine Journal, November 20135The authors point out that the introduction of: compulsory seat belts drink driving curbs child safety seats speed camerasas well as the development of specialist trauma centres, will all have helped to drive down road traffic fatalities.

YET WHY?Cars have become safer, but safety comes at a cost more expensive cars have more safety features

AirbagsFront crumple zoneCollapsible steering wheelSide impact barsFront seat beltsRear seat beltsRear crumple zoneCar safety features Inertia: the resistance an object has to a change in its state of motion.

If the car comes to a sudden stop the passengers will keep moving until another force stops them.

If its the windscreen, steering wheel or dashboard it can cause a lot of damage.

The seat belt helps to keep them in their seat and an air bag will cushion the blow.Momentum All moving objects have momentum. The greater the mass and the greater the velocity then the greater the momentum.Momentum (p) = mass (m) x velocity (v) p = mvIn a collision the momentum is the same before as after the collision (provided there are no external forces)

Momentum before = momentum afterMomentum Momentum (p) = mass (m) x velocity (v) p = mvWhen a force acts on an object and moves it its momentum changes.= v u t= m xIf the acceleration is greater, what does it say aboutthe time?If F is larger, whatcan you say aboutthe acceleration?aaFMore time means less force.Newtons second law

Seat beltThe seat belt exerts a force to keep the driver and passenger in their seats and prevent them going through the windscreen.The seat belt stretches slightly which increases the impact time (t) and so reduces the force (F)Air bag

With an air bag the time for a person to decelerate is greater than if they hit the windscreen.The impact time (t), the time to come to a halt, is increased so the force (F) is decreased.The air bag spreads the forces on the body across a larger area. Crumple ZoneThe crumple zone is designed to absorb energy from a collision and reduce the force of a collision. Folding during a collision crash increases the impact time. Time (t) to come to a halt is increased so the force (F) is decreased.

New car with crumple zone.Old car without.15Braking systemsRegenerative breakingBy using the car's energy to drive a generator to charge a battery saves the energy that can be used later.

The energy from the regenerative braking is energy that would have gone to heating up the breaks in non-hybrid cars.

By doing this the hybrid gets more useful work out of the original input energy (either gas or electric).

Hybrid cars have an electric engine and a petrol engine. This type of car is often fitted with a regenerative braking system.

A regenerative braking system not only slows a car down but at the same time causes a generator to charge the cars battery.

Now consider the duration of the impact

What is the effect of increasing the stopping time?

The stopping distance of a vehicle is the sum of the distance the vehicle travels during the drivers reaction time (thinking distance) and the distance it travels under the braking force (braking distance).

Stopping distance = Thinking distance + Braking distanceStopping distance Stopping distance = +Thinking distance Braking distanceTirednessDrugsAlcoholBad road conditionsPoor weather conditions Poor condition of the vehicle eg brakes, tyresStopping distance Braking systemsAnti-lock breaking system (ABS) helps to stop skidding and so helps keep the car under control. Brakes work by converting the cars kinetic energy into heat energy.

When the brakes of a vehicle are applied, work done by the friction force between the brakes and the wheel reduces the kinetic energy of the vehicle and the temperature of the brakes increases.

A car travels a distance of 1000m in 40s (constant speed).What is the speed of the car? s = d/t = 1000/40 = 25 m/s

What is the acceleration if the car stops in a further 5s? a = (v-u)/t = (0 - 25)/5 = - 5 m/s2

If the car has a mass of 1000kg, how much kinetic energy did it have during the 40s?

KE = mv2 = x 1000 x 252 = 312500 J = 312.5 kJ

How much work is done by the brakes in stopping the car?

Work Done = Energy Transferred = 312.5 kJ What is the average retarding force acting on the car as it stops?

Force = mass x acceleration = 1000 x 5 = 5000 NExtended questionIn 1983 it became a legal requirement to wear a seatbelt whilst travelling in a car in the UK. Since then new car designs have developed to increase the safety of the driver and passengers. Outline these safety designs. You should include:A description of the safety features of a vehicleAn explanation of how they protect the people in the carThe physics concepts when the vehicle stops suddenly or crashes Any ideas you have on future vehicle safety featuresDiagrams to support your description.