Helmet Foam Drop Tower with Auxetic Lattices Science Fair
ISEF Category: Biomedical Engineering
Ready to Turn This Idea Into a Real Project?
This guide was put together with the help of AI research tools to give you a solid starting point. But a competitive science fair project lives in the details: refining your research question, fine-tuning your variables, analyzing your data, and presenting your findings like a seasoned scientist.
For next steps tailored to your interests, skill level, and timeline, work one-on-one with a MehtA+ mentor. Learn more about MehtA+ Science & Engineering Research Mentorship →
Subcategory: Biomechanics · Difficulty: Advanced · Setup: Home Setup · Time: 1 to 2 Months
The Hook
Helmet liners haven't changed much since the 1980s. New options include cornstarch goo, sorbothane scraps, and 3D-printed auxetic lattices that pull inward when squeezed. A PVC drop tower with a $5 accelerometer can put each one through real impacts. Free FEA software predicts how the protected brain would deform.
What Is It?
A drop tower is a vertical guide that releases a weight onto a sample. The peak acceleration measured at the weight tells you how much the sample absorbed.
Cornstarch oobleck is a non-Newtonian fluid that stiffens under fast loads. Sorbothane is a viscoelastic polymer that dissipates energy as heat. Auxetic lattices use a geometry that pulls inward when compressed, distributing load over more area.
CalculiX is free FEA software. The Holbourn rotational model treats the brain as a spinning mass inside the skull. By feeding measured drop-tower kinematics into a surrogate FEA model, you predict brain strain without imaging an actual head.
Why This Is a Good Topic
Helmet design connects materials science, mechanics, and simulation. The drop tower is buildable for under a hundred dollars and the FEA is free. You will learn impact testing, viscoelastic materials, and surrogate-model interpretation.
Research Questions
- How does drop height change peak acceleration across liners?
- What is the effect of auxetic cell size on energy absorption?
- Does oobleck outperform foam at high impact velocity?
- To what extent does layer stacking change attenuation?
- Which liner predicts lowest brain strain in the FEA surrogate?
- How does temperature affect sorbothane performance?
- What is the effect of repeated impacts on liner degradation?
Basic Materials
- PVC pipe and joints for drop tower.
- Standard weight (steel puck or similar).
- ADXL345 or MPU-6050 accelerometer.
- Microcontroller (ESP32 or Arduino).
- Cornstarch and water for oobleck.
- Sorbothane sample sheet.
- 3D-printed auxetic lattice samples.
- Safety eyewear and shielding.
Advanced Materials
- Calibrated load cell at drop base.
- High-speed camera.
- Industry-standard impact test rig.
- Calibrated brain-injury surrogate head form.
Software & Tools
- CalculiX: Runs the FEA surrogate brain-strain model.
- Python (NumPy): Processes accelerometer time series.
- OpenSCAD: Designs auxetic lattices.
- Cura: Slices 3D-printed liners.
Experiment Steps
- Build and calibrate the drop tower against a known free fall.
- Print a single liner geometry so only material varies.
- Decide drop heights, replicate counts, and the order of conditions.
- Plan controls (no liner, rigid block) that bracket performance.
- Run drops in randomized order and log every trial.
- Compare measured kinematics to predicted brain strain in CalculiX.
Common Pitfalls
- Using an accelerometer that saturates at the highest drop.
- Reusing oobleck across drops, which dehydrates the mix.
- Running too few replicates and missing high variance.
- Skipping calibration of drop height between sessions.
- Treating raw acceleration as injury risk without a strain surrogate.
What Makes This Competitive
Calibrate the accelerometer against a known free-fall reference. Run multiple drop heights, replicate each at least five times, and use a standard liner geometry across foams. Compare your predicted brain strain to published thresholds and use ANOVA across designs.
Project Variations
- Replace 3D-printed auxetic lattices with origami patterns and compare.
- Add a temperature sweep on sorbothane.
- Test multiple ball-shape impactors to vary contact area.
Learn More
- CalculiX documentation: Free FEA tutorials.
- PubMed: Search auxetic helmet liner review.
- NIH PubMed Central: Open-access head-injury biomechanics papers.
- NIST Material Measurement Lab: Impact-test references.
- MIT OpenCourseWare: Course 3.054 Cellular Solids.
Biomedical Engineering Category Guide
How to Do Real Biomedical Engineering Research at Home: A High School Student’s Guide to Free Tools, Affordable Kits, and Public Databases →For next steps tailored to your interests, skill level, and timeline, work one-on-one with a MehtA+ mentor. Learn more about MehtA+ Science & Engineering Research Mentorship →
To discover more projects, visit the MehtA+ Science Fair Project Discovery Hub →
