The term Active Safety can be used in two distinct ways.

The first, mainly used in the US, refers to safety systems that help avoid accidents, such as good steering and brakes. In this context, passive safety refers to features that help reduce the effects of an accident, such as seat belts, airbags and strong body structures. This use is essentially interchangeable with the terms primary and secondary safety that tend to be used in the UK.

However, Active Safety is increasingly being used to describe systems that use an understanding of the state of the vehicle to both avoid and minimise the effects of a crash. These include braking systems, like brake assist, traction control systems and electronic stability control systems, that interpret signals from various sensors to help the driver control the vehicle. Additionally, forward-looking, sensor-based systems such as Advanced Driver Assistance Systems including adaptive cruise control and collision warning/avoidance/mitigation systems are also considered as active safety systems under this definition.

These forward-looking technologies are expected to play an increasing role in collision avoidance and mitigation in the future. Most major component suppliers, such as Delphi, TRW and Bosch, are developing such systems. However, as they become more sophisticated, questions will need to be addressed regarding driver autonomy and at what point these systems should intervene if they believe a crash is likely.

In engineering, active safety systems are systems activated in response to a safety problem or abnormal event. Such systems may be activated by a human operator, automatically by a computer driven system, or even mechanically. In nuclear engineering, active safety contrasts to passive safety in that it relies on operator or computer automated intervention, whereas passive safety systems rely on the laws of nature to make the reactor respond to dangerous events in a favourable manner.

Examples

  • The computer operated control rods in a nuclear power station provide an active safety system, whereas a fuel that produces less heat at abnormally high temperatures constitutes a passive safety feature.
  • Collision avoidance systems in a modern car.
  • Many buildings have interconnected fire alarms that can be triggered manually by pushing a button or breaking a glass plate attached to sensors.

Automotive Sector

In the automotive sector the term Active Safety (or Primary Safety) refers to safety systems that are active prior an accident. This has traditionally referred to non-complex systems such as good visibility from the vehicle. Now days however, this area contains highly advanced systems such as anti-lock braking system, electronic stability control and collision warning/avoidance through automatic braking. This compares with Passive Safety (or Secondary Safety), which are active during an accident. To this category belongs e.g. seat belts, deformation zones and air-bags.

Since the progress within passive safety systems have reach very far, the automotive industry has shift its attention to active safety where still a lot of new unexplored areas exists. Research today focuses primary on collision avoidance with other vehicles, pedestrians and wild animals[1] and vehicle platooning.[2]

Active Safety Systems, some examples

Passive Safety Systems, some examples

  • passenger safety cell,
  • deformation zones,
  • seat belts,
  • loadspace barrier-nets,
  • air-bags,
  • laminated glass,
  • correctly positioned fuel tanks,
  • fuel pump kill switches

See also

References

External links

fr:Sécurité active nl:Actieve veiligheid ja:アクティブセーフティ ru:Активная безопасность автомобиля uk:Активна безпека