How does Airbag work in automobiles?
When a car hits something, it starts to decelerate (lose speed) very rapidly.
An accelerometer (electronic chip that measures acceleration or force) detects the change of speed.
If the deceleration is great enough, the accelerometer triggers the airbag circuit. Normal braking doesn't generate enough force to do this.
The heating element ignites a chemical explosive. Older airbags used sodium aside as their explosive; newer ones use different chemicals.
As the explosive burns, it generates a massive amount of harmless gas (typically either nitrogen or argon) that floods into a nylon bag packed behind the steering wheel.
As the bag expands, it blows the plastic cover off the steering wheel and inflates in front of the driver. The bag is coated with a chalky substance such as talcum powder to help it unwrap smoothly.
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