460 research outputs found

    Cooperative control of autonomous connected vehicles from a Networked Control perspective: Theory and experimental validation

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    Formation control of autonomous connected vehicles is one of the typical problems addressed in the general context of networked control systems. By leveraging this paradigm, a platoon composed by multiple connected and automated vehicles is represented as one-dimensional network of dynamical agents, in which each agent only uses its neighboring information to locally control its motion, while it aims to achieve certain global coordination with all other agents. Within this theoretical framework, control algorithms are traditionally designed based on an implicit assumption of unlimited bandwidth and perfect communication environments. However, in practice, wireless communication networks, enabling the cooperative driving applications, introduce unavoidable communication impairments such as transmission delay and packet losses that strongly affect the performances of cooperative driving. Moreover, in addition to this problem, wireless communication networks can suffer different security threats. The challenge in the control field is hence to design cooperative control algorithms that are robust to communication impairments and resilient to cyber attacks. The work aim is to tackle and solve these challenges by proposing different properly designed control strategies. They are validated both in analytical, numerical and experimental ways. Obtained results confirm the effectiveness of the strategies in coping with communication impairments and security vulnerabilities

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    Cooperative Vehicular Platooning (Co-VP) is a paradigmatic example of a Cooperative Cyber-Physical System (Co-CPS), which holds the potential to vastly improve road safety by partially removing humans from the driving task. However, the challenges are substantial, as the domain involves several topics, such as control theory, communications, vehicle dynamics, security, and traffic engineering, that must be coupled to describe, develop and validate these systems of systems accurately. This work presents a comprehensive survey of significant and recent advances in Co-VP relevant fields. We start by overviewing the work on control strategies and underlying communication infrastructures, focusing on their interplay. We also address a fundamental concern by presenting a cyber-security overview regarding these systems. Furthermore, we present and compare the primary initiatives to test and validate those systems, including simulation tools, hardware-in-the-loop setups, and vehicular testbeds. Finally, we highlight a few open challenges in the Co-VP domain. This work aims to provide a fundamental overview of highly relevant works on Co-VP topics, particularly by exposing their inter-dependencies, facilitating a guide that will support further developments in this challenging field.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Research on Information Flow Topology for Connected Autonomous Vehicles

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    Information flow topology plays a crucial role in connected autonomous vehicles (CAVs). It describes how CAVs communicate and exchange information with each other. It predominantly affects the platoon\u27s performance, including the convergence time, robustness, stability, and scalability. It also dramatically affects the controller design of CAVs. Therefore, studying information flow topology is necessary to ensure the platoon\u27s stability and improve its performance. Advanced sliding mode controllers and optimisation strategies for information flow topology are investigated in this project. Firstly, the impact of information flow topology on the platoon is studied regarding tracking ability, fuel economy and driving comfort. A Pareto optimal information flow topology offline searching approach is proposed using a non-dominated sorting genetic algorithm (NSGA-II) to improve the platoon\u27s overall performance while ensuring stability. Secondly, the concept of asymmetric control is introduced in the topological matrix. For a linear CAVs model with time delay, a sliding mode controller is designed to target the platoon\u27s tracking performance. Moreover, the Lyapunov analysis is used via Riccati inequality to guarantee the platoon\u27s internal stability and input-to-output string stability. Then NSGA-II is used to find the homogeneous Pareto optimal asymmetric degree to improve the platoon\u27s performance. A similar approach is designed for a nonlinear CAVs model to find the Pareto heterogeneous asymmetric degree and improve the platoon\u27s performance. Thirdly, switching topology is studied to better deal with the platoon\u27s communication problems. A two-step switching topology framework is introduced. In the first step, an offline Pareto optimal topology search with imperfect communication scenarios is applied. The platoon\u27s performance is optimised using a multi-objective evolutionary algorithm based on decomposition (MOEA/D). In the second step, the optimal topology is switched and selected from among the previously obtained Pareto optimal topology candidates in real-time to minimise the control cost. For a continuous nonlinear heterogeneous platoon with actuator faults, a sliding mode controller with an adaptive mechanism is developed. Then, the Lyapunov approach is applied to the platoon\u27s tracking error dynamics, ensuring the systems uniformly ultimately bounded stability and string stability. For a discrete nonlinear heterogeneous platoon with packet loss, a discrete sliding mode controller with a double power reaching law is designed, and a modified MOEA/D with two opposing adaptive mechanisms is applied in the two-step framework. Simulations verify all the proposed controllers and frameworks, and experiments also test some. The results show the proposed strategy\u27s effectiveness and superiority in optimising the platoon\u27s performance with multiple objectives
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