Coordination of steer angles, tyre inflation pressure, brake and drive torques for vehicle dynamics control

During vehicle operation, the control objectives of stability, handling, energy consumption and comfort have different priorities, which are determined by road conditions and driver behavior. To achieve better operation characteristics of vehicle, coordinated control of vehicle subsystems is activel...

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Main Authors: Shyrokau, Barys, Wang, Danwei
Other Authors: School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2015
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/104738
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/24992
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1047382020-03-07T14:00:29Z Coordination of steer angles, tyre inflation pressure, brake and drive torques for vehicle dynamics control Shyrokau, Barys Wang, Danwei School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering During vehicle operation, the control objectives of stability, handling, energy consumption and comfort have different priorities, which are determined by road conditions and driver behavior. To achieve better operation characteristics of vehicle, coordinated control of vehicle subsystems is actively used. The fact of more active vehicle subsystems in a modern passenger car provides more flexibility for vehicle control and control algorithm development. Since the modern vehicle can be considered as over-actuated system, control allocation is an effective control technique to solve such kind of problem. This paper describes coordination of frictional brake system, individual-wheel drive electric motors, active front and rear steering, active camber mechanisms and tyre pressure control system. To coordinate vehicle subsystems, optimization-based control allocation with dynamic weights is applied. The influence of different weights (subsystem restriction) on criteria of vehicle dynamics (RMSE of yaw rate, sideslip angle, dynamic tyre load factor) and energy consumption and losses (consumed/recuperated energy during maneuver, longitudinal velocity decline, tyre energy dissipation) were analyzed. Based on this analysis, the optimal solution was selected. The proposed control strategy is based on the switching between optimal criteria related to vehicle safety and energy efficiency during vehicle motion. Dynamic weights were utilized to achieve this switching. The simulation-based analysis and evaluation of both variants was carried out using a nonlinear vehicle model with detailed models of actuators. The test maneuver is ‘Sine with Dwell’. Both variants of control allocation guarantees vehicle stability of motion and good handling. Meanwhile, proposed variant demonstrates slightly higher longitudinal velocity at the end of maneuver and higher amount of recuperated energy up to 15%; however, tyre dissipation energy increased to 5% compared to optimal solution from simulation-based analysis. Published version 2015-02-02T02:35:07Z 2019-12-06T21:38:37Z 2015-02-02T02:35:07Z 2019-12-06T21:38:37Z 2013 2013 Journal Article Shyrokau, B., & Wang, D. (2013). Coordination of steer angles, tyre inflation pressure, brake and drive torques for vehicle dynamics control. SAE International journal of passenger cars - mechanical systems, 6(1), 241-251. 1946-3995 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/104738 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/24992 10.4271/2013-01-0712 en SAE International journal of passenger cars - mechanical systems Copyright © 2013 SAE International. This paper is posted on this site with permission from SAE International and is for viewing only. It may not be stored on any additional repositories or retrieval systems. Further use or distribution is not permitted without permission from SAE. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering
Shyrokau, Barys
Wang, Danwei
Coordination of steer angles, tyre inflation pressure, brake and drive torques for vehicle dynamics control
description During vehicle operation, the control objectives of stability, handling, energy consumption and comfort have different priorities, which are determined by road conditions and driver behavior. To achieve better operation characteristics of vehicle, coordinated control of vehicle subsystems is actively used. The fact of more active vehicle subsystems in a modern passenger car provides more flexibility for vehicle control and control algorithm development. Since the modern vehicle can be considered as over-actuated system, control allocation is an effective control technique to solve such kind of problem. This paper describes coordination of frictional brake system, individual-wheel drive electric motors, active front and rear steering, active camber mechanisms and tyre pressure control system. To coordinate vehicle subsystems, optimization-based control allocation with dynamic weights is applied. The influence of different weights (subsystem restriction) on criteria of vehicle dynamics (RMSE of yaw rate, sideslip angle, dynamic tyre load factor) and energy consumption and losses (consumed/recuperated energy during maneuver, longitudinal velocity decline, tyre energy dissipation) were analyzed. Based on this analysis, the optimal solution was selected. The proposed control strategy is based on the switching between optimal criteria related to vehicle safety and energy efficiency during vehicle motion. Dynamic weights were utilized to achieve this switching. The simulation-based analysis and evaluation of both variants was carried out using a nonlinear vehicle model with detailed models of actuators. The test maneuver is ‘Sine with Dwell’. Both variants of control allocation guarantees vehicle stability of motion and good handling. Meanwhile, proposed variant demonstrates slightly higher longitudinal velocity at the end of maneuver and higher amount of recuperated energy up to 15%; however, tyre dissipation energy increased to 5% compared to optimal solution from simulation-based analysis.
author2 School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
author_facet School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Shyrokau, Barys
Wang, Danwei
format Article
author Shyrokau, Barys
Wang, Danwei
author_sort Shyrokau, Barys
title Coordination of steer angles, tyre inflation pressure, brake and drive torques for vehicle dynamics control
title_short Coordination of steer angles, tyre inflation pressure, brake and drive torques for vehicle dynamics control
title_full Coordination of steer angles, tyre inflation pressure, brake and drive torques for vehicle dynamics control
title_fullStr Coordination of steer angles, tyre inflation pressure, brake and drive torques for vehicle dynamics control
title_full_unstemmed Coordination of steer angles, tyre inflation pressure, brake and drive torques for vehicle dynamics control
title_sort coordination of steer angles, tyre inflation pressure, brake and drive torques for vehicle dynamics control
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/104738
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/24992
_version_ 1681047343227469824