scholarly journals Robust vehicle stability control with an uncertain driver model

Author(s):  
Ashwin Carvalho ◽  
Giovanni Palmieri ◽  
H. Eric Tseng ◽  
Luigi Glielmo ◽  
Francesco Borrelli
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 857 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fei-Xiang Xu ◽  
Xin-Hui Liu ◽  
Wei Chen ◽  
Chen Zhou ◽  
and Bing-Wei Cao

Considering the demand for vehicle stability control and the existence of uncertainties in the four-wheel steering (4WS) system, the mixed H2/H∞ robust control methodology of the 4WS system is proposed. Firstly, the linear 2DOF vehicle model, the nonlinear 8DOF vehicle model, the driver model, and the rear wheel electrohydraulic system model were constructed. Secondly, based on the yaw rate tracking strategy, the mixed H2/H∞ controller was designed with the optimized weighting functions to guarantee system performance, robustness, and the robust stability of the 4WS vehicle stability control system. The H∞ method was applied to minimize the effects of modeling uncertainties, sensor noise, and external disturbances on the system outputs, and the H2 method was used to ensure system performance. Finally, numerical simulations based on Matlab/Simulink and hardware-in-the-loop experiments were performed with the proposed control strategy to identify its performance. The simulation and experimental results indicate that the handling stability of the 4WS vehicle is improved by the H2/H∞ controller and that the 4WS system with the H2/H∞ controller has better handling stability and robustness than those of the H∞ controller and the proportional controller.


2001 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 108-132 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Ghazi Zadeh ◽  
A. Fahim

Abstract The dynamics of a vehicle's tires is a major contributor to the vehicle stability, control, and performance. A better understanding of the handling performance and lateral stability of the vehicle can be achieved by an in-depth study of the transient behavior of the tire. In this article, the transient response of the tire to a steering angle input is examined and an analytical second order tire model is proposed. This model provides a means for a better understanding of the transient behavior of the tire. The proposed model is also applied to a vehicle model and its performance is compared with a first order tire model.


Author(s):  
Justin Sill ◽  
Beshah Ayalew

This paper presents a predictive vehicle stability control (VSC) strategy that distributes the drive/braking torques to each wheel of the vehicle based on the optimal exploitation of the available traction capability for each tire. To this end, tire saturation levels are defined as the deficiency of a tire to generate a force that linearly increases with the relevant slip quantities. These saturation levels are then used to set up an optimization objective for a torque distribution problem within a novel cascade control structure that exploits the natural time scale separation of the slower lateral handling dynamics of the vehicle from the relatively faster rotational dynamics of the wheel/tire. The envisaged application of the proposed vehicle stability strategy is for vehicles with advanced and emerging pure electric, hybrid electric or hydraulic hybrid power trains featuring independent wheel drives. The developed predictive control strategy is evaluated for, a two-axle truck featuring such an independent drive system and subjected to a transient handling maneuver.


2013 ◽  
Vol 658 ◽  
pp. 602-608 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheng Lin ◽  
Chun Lei Peng

This paper presents the design of mixed H∞/H2Output Feedback Controller for Independent Drive Electric Vehicle Stability Control. It generates yaw moment by applying driving intervention at front Independent driving wheels according to the vehicle states. The performance of the proposed controller is evaluated through a series of simulations under different velocity and different mass. The simulation results show that the controller can help vehicle against a certain range of uncertainty (speeds and loads) and get excellent robust performance.


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