1. Introduction
This contribution to the ICHAV 2023 workshop dedicated to shock vibration has the intention to give a background to the term shock and the inevitable relation between its duration and frequency. It will also present some studies on shock vibration carried out on biological systems which, to some extent, can be transferred to humans.
2. Properties of Shock Vibration
Shock vibration is commonly generated in many machines where there is a strong force acting on the machine during a very short time compared to the work duty cycle. The force can originate from several mechanisms, but one of the most common (and the one with the highest acceleration amplitudes) is related to an accelerated mass hitting a work tool and releasing its energy. This can be the piston hitting the drill in a hammer drill, or the impact mechanism hitting the shaft with the socket in an impact wrench. Generally, the force is very high and the duration in which they are in contact is very short, typically 20 µs for a pneumatic drill. In an ideal situation, all the energy would be transferred to the tool, but this is not the case. Instead, part of the impact energy is also transferred to the machine housing, where it creates a vibration that propagates to the hand of the operator. The vibration consists of both the direct impact and the resonances in the machine structures that are excited.
The relation between the pulse duration and the frequency content is given by
. In ISO 5349-1 [
1], only frequencies below 1250 Hz are considered. Therefore, shock pulses with a duration shorter than 0,8 msec are essentially excluded, which applies to most of the shock seen in hand-held machines. An example of this is shown in
Figure 1 and
Figure 2, which show the time signal and frequency spectrum of the acceleration measured on the handle of a typical ¾” pneumatic impact wrench. In
Figure 1, the RMS and VPM (vibration peak magnitude [
2,
3]) are marked in red and green. The red line in
Figure 2 is the cumulated energy and, as can be seen, only a fraction of the energy is below 1250 Hz. This underlines the necessity to measure shocks at sufficiently high frequencies to capture the phenomena. The acceleration should therefore be measured at a frequency that is sufficiently high enough to be able to cover the main energy content transferred to the biological system of interest.
3. Physiological Effects of Shock
There have been several studies investigating the effects of vibration on physiological systems, using both in vitro and in vivo models. A review article is found in [
4].
3.1. Tests on Red Blood Cells
There are two studies that have investigated the effect of high-frequency shock’s impacts on red blood cells indicating a correlation to physiological effect. The advantage of using red blood cells is that it is easy to measure the degree of lysis by analysing the haemoglobin colouring of the plasma or counting the viable cells. In the first study [
5], elastomer containers of cow blood were attached to a machine surface and subjected to vibration for 15 min. The result indicates that the degree of lysis of the cells was considerably stronger correlated to the high-frequency peak acceleration than to the ISO 5349-1 value. See
Table 1.
In the second study on red blood cells [
6], the blood was placed in containers and inserted into an impact hammer simulation test rig, creating high-acceleration amplitudes. The results showed a clear correlation between the degree of lysis and the exposure time and amplitude.
3.2. Test on Mouse Fibroblast Cells
This study was recently performed at RISE Research Institutes of Sweden as a pilot study to measure the biological effects of shock vibrations and compare them to low-frequency sinusoidal vibrations. The cells tested were L929 mouse fibroblast cells (NCTC clone 929: CCL-1 American Type Culture Collection). Two test rigs were constructed, one for emitting mainly sinusoidal vibration at 50 Hz and one for shock vibration. Both rigs had essentially the same ISO 5349-1 acceleration and the difference was in the high-frequency shock.
The results show a clear indication that shock vibration has an effect on cell viability. The colorimetric assay result of the cell viability (
Table 2) corresponded well with the microscopic observations (
Figure 3). A hypothesis is that the detrimental effects of shock are caused by cavitation in the samples.
3.3. Test on Rat Tails
This study [
7] was conducted on a rat tail model, where the rat tail was exposed to shock vibration from a dedicated test rig, with the intention of having a vibration level similar to that of a bucking bar. The measurements that were made on the test rig after the study was published showed that the ISO 5349-1 vibration was 9 m/s
2 and the peak acceleration was approx. 100,000 m/s
2, measured up to 50 kHz.
The tails were exposed to a single 12 min vibration. Immediately after stopping the vibration, there was damage to the nerve endings in the skin, as well as mast cell degranulation and hypersensitivity to thermal stimulation. Four days after stopping the vibration, the nerve endings had become disrupted, indicating that the single vibration insult triggered a destruction process.
The results from the study are summarized in “Shock-wave vibration causes severe nerve damage. Frequency weighting seriously underestimates the risk of nerve injury with impact tools”.
4. Discussion
High-frequency shock vibration has long since been suspected to cause vibration injuries, and a number of studies have shown the physiological effects, of which a few are described in this abstract. However, in the current standard for risk evaluation, ISO5349-1, only frequencies up to 1250 Hz are considered, and within that bandwidth, the higher frequencies are supressed. This results in the shock vibration being almost eliminated.
To progress the research field of vibration injuries, it is necessary to increase the studied frequency and develop test methods for higher frequencies, as well as metrics for the quantification and definition of shock, together with exposure metrics.
The potential for substantially reducing high-frequency shock at a low cost is huge for machines but, unfortunately, there is no incentive, since shock vibration is not considered for either risk estimation or for vibration declaration.
Author Contributions
Conceptualization, H.L., S.L.G. and A.P.; methodology, H.L., S.L.G. and A.P.; validation, H.L., Gretarsson and A.P.; writing—original draft preparation, H.L. and A.P.; writing—review and editing, H.L. and A.P. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding
AFA Insurance and The Swedish Innovation board VINNOVA.
Institutional Review Board Statement
Not applicable.
Informed Consent Statement
Not applicable.
Data Availability Statement
Not applicable.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
References
- ISO 5349-1; Mechanical Vibration–Measurement and Evaluation of Human Exposure to Hand-Transmitted Vibration–Part I: General Requirements. International Organization for Standardization (ISO): Geneva, Switzerland, 2002.
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