| Accident
Reconstruction Network > News
Accident Reconstruction News Article
Steel Axial Crash Testing Study Presented the AISI/SAE 2005
Sydney H. Melbourne Award for Excellence in the Advancement of Automotive
Steel
DETROIT, April 4 /PRNewswire/ -- The Society of Automotive
Engineers International (SAE) announced Todd Link and Jeff Grimm, employees
at the U. S. Steel Research and Technology Center in Monroeville, PA, as the
recipients of the 2005 SAE International/American Iron and Steel Institute
(AISI) Sydney H. Melbourne Award for Excellence in the Advancement of Automotive
Sheet Steel.
Link and Grimm received the award for co-authoring a paper
presented at the 2005 SAE World Congress titled, "Axial Crash Testing
of Advanced High Strength Steel Tubes" (SAE paper No. 2005-01-0836).
The authors, using a drop tower test and a cylindrical tube
specimen, evaluated the axial crash performance of five conventional steels
and seven advanced high strength steels. Both dual phase and transformation-induced
plasticity steels with tensile strengths of 600 MPa and 800 MPa were tested,
as were the effects of tensile strength and sheet thickness on crash performance.
The results show that substituting higher strength steels of
the same thickness can reduce crash deformation, or existing crashworthiness
can be maintained and weight reduction achieved by substituting higher strength
steels with reduced thickness.
Ronald Krupitzer, vice president, automotive applications, AISI,
noted, "Todd Link and Jeff Grimm are furthering the knowledge base of
the automotive industry by providing data related to crash safety utilizing
steel, the material of choice by the automotive community.
"Through this lab experiment on crash testing, the steel
industry is able to demonstrate that steel can absorb enormous energy in simulated
crash and still contribute to mass reduction."
Don Pether, president and CEO of Dofasco Inc., augmented Krupitzer's
remarks. "Sydney Melbourne promoted the advancement of steel applications
through improvement in automobile production with steel. This award encourages
engineers in our industry to reach beyond current standards to achieve steel
technological advancements that benefit the automotive industry, the steel
industry and the consumer. The research of Todd Link and Jeff Grimm is a timely
contributor to our knowledge base as the demand for automotive safety increases."
The authors will be honored at 5:00 p.m. today during the SAE
Awards Ceremony at the Marriott Renaissance Center in Detroit, Michigan.
About the authors:
Todd Link is a Senior Research Engineer with U. S. Steel, since
1998, focusing on automotive product applications. In 2002, he received the
Sydney H. Melbourne Award and the AISI Medal for his papers on fatigue performance,
crash behavior, and formability of advanced high-strength steels. He holds
a bachelor's and master's degree from Pennsylvania State University.
Jeff Grimm is a Senior Technician with U. S. Steel, since 2002,
and focuses on product technology in sheet products including static testing,
dynamic testing, and fracture mechanics. He holds two associate degrees in
metrology and electrical engineering technology from Butler County Community
College.
About SAE:
SAE is a nonprofit engineering and scientific organization dedicated
to the advancement of mobility technology to better serve humanity. Nearly
84,000 engineers and scientists who are SAE members develop technical information
on all forms of self-propelled vehicles, including automobiles, aircrafts,
aerospace crafts, trucks, buses, marine, rail and transit machinery. This
information is disseminated through SAE meetings, books, electronic products
and databases, technical papers, standards, reports and professional development
programs.
About AISI:
AISI established this award through the SAE Foundation to honor
the memory and accomplishments of the late Sydney H. Melbourne. Melbourne,
who was director of market development and product applications with Dofasco
Inc., was actively involved in enhancing relationships between the steel and
automotive industries and participated in the formation of the Auto/Steel
Partnership.
During his distinguished career, Melbourne served as director
of DNN Galvanizing Corporation, chairman of the board at Forming Technologies,
Inc., and as a past president of the Metallurgical Society of the Canadian
Institute of Mining. He was a member of the Zinc Aluminum Coaters Association
and the International Iron and Steel Institute.
Melbourne also actively participated on numerous committees
within the AISI Automotive Applications Committee, the Auto/Steel Partnership
and the UltraLight Steel Auto Body project.
AISI serves as the voice of the North American steel industry
in the public policy arena and advances the case for steel in the marketplace
as the preferred material of choice. AISI also plays a lead role in the development
and application of new steels and steelmaking technology. AISI is comprised
of 33 member companies, including integrated and electric furnace steelmakers,
and 118 associate and affiliate members who are suppliers to our customers
of the steel industry. AISI's member companies represent approximately 75
percent of both U.S. and North American steel capacity.
The Automotive Applications Committee (AAC) is a subcommittee
of the Market Development Committee of AISI and focuses on advancing the use
of steel in the highly competitive automotive market. With offices and staff
located in Detroit, cooperation between the automobile and steel industries
has been key to its success. This industry cooperation resulted in the formation
of the Auto/Steel Partnership, a consortium of DaimlerChrysler Corporation,
Ford Motor Company and General Motors Corporation and the member companies
of the AAC. For more news or information, visit http://www.autosteel.org
.
American Iron and Steel Institute/Automotive Applications Committee:
AK Steel Corporation
Dofasco Inc.
Mittal Steel USA
Nucor Corporation
Severstal North America Inc.
Stelco Inc.
United States Steel Corporation
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: American Iron and Steel Institute
###
Back to Accident
Reconstruction News
|