Hyundai developing advanced safety system controls
MUSCAT: Hyundai Motor Company has started to develop advanced occupant safety technologies to help reduce the risk of passenger injuries in autonomous vehicles. The companies revealed the first stage of this development: a control algorithm optimised for autonomous driving conditions.
Autonomous vehicles use advanced technologies such as onboard cameras and radar sensors to determine risk factors and greatly reduce the likelihood of accidents. However, researchers have determined the need for specialised safety system controls that are optimised for autonomous driving conditions, given the risk of other vehicles crossing the centerline or the sudden appearance of other hazards or obstacles.
To this end, Hyundai has developed a new autonomous vehicle safety control algorithm, aimed at reducing the risk of such accidents and mitigating their impact. As an autonomous vehicle reduces its speed or changes direction to avoid a sudden hazard or obstacle, the control algorithm calculates occupants’ anticipated movements. These calculations enable the system to optimise the use of onboard safety devices, such as airbags and seat belt pretensioners.
Hyundai has tested a range of autonomous driving scenarios and found that, in steering to avoid the obstacle, the car threw a passenger off balance before colliding with the obstacle. Under these circumstances the passenger was out of position as the airbag deployed, providing reduced protection.
By applying the new algorithm, however, the airbag and seat belt pre-tensioner were deployed more effectively to provide far greater
Autonomous vehicles use advanced technologies such as on-board cameras and radar sensors to determine risk factors and greatly reduce the likelihood of accidents
protection to the passenger. The algorithm reduced the passenger’s angle of movement by momentarily tightening the seatbelt pre-tensioner just before the collision. This stabilised the passenger’s posture and provided further protection by pre-activating the side and curtain airbags at the moment of the crash.
Even in a scenario where the autonomous car brakes to a halt and successfully avoids an obstacle, the algorithm still pre-tightens the seat belts to reduce the risk of injury while the possibility of a collision still exists. The new algorithm will be applied to a range of future autonomous vehicles from Hyundai.
“Aligned with autonomous driving vehicle developments, Hyundai is proactively developing new safety technologies to maximise passenger safety,” said Wook Jin, Head of Integrated Safety Development Group at Hyundai Research & Development Division. “We are directing our efforts toward creating the safest autonomous driving technologies that provide maximum protection to passengers, even if the vehicle they are travelling in takes action to avoid a collision.”