8,322 research outputs found

    A Comparison Between Coupled and Decoupled Vehicle Motion Controllers Based on Prediction Models

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    In this work, a comparative study is carried out with two different predictive controllers that consider the longitudinal jerk and steering rate change as additional parameters, as additional parameters, so that comfort constraints can be included. Furthermore, the approaches are designed so that the effect of longitudinal and lateral motion control coupling can be analyzed. This way, the first controller is a longitudinal and lateral coupled MPC approach based on a kinematic model of the vehicle, while the second is a decoupled strategy based on a triple integrator model based on MPC for the longitudinal control and a double proportional curvature control for the lateral motion control. The control architecture and motion planning are exhaustively explained. The comparative study is carried out using a test vehicle, whose dynamics and low-level controllers have been simulated using the realistic simulation environment Dynacar. The performed tests demonstrate the effectiveness of both approaches in speeds higher than 30 km/h, and demonstrate that the coupled strategy provides better performance than the decoupled one. The relevance of this work relies in the contribution of vehicle motion controllers considering the comfort and its advantage over decoupled alternatives for future implementation in real vehicles.This work has been conducted within the ENABLE-S3 project that has received funding from the ECSEL Joint Undertaking under Grant Agreement No 692455. This work was developed at Tecnalia Research & Innovation facilities supporting this research

    Model Predictive Control Based Trajectory Generation for Autonomous Vehicles - An Architectural Approach

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    Research in the field of automated driving has created promising results in the last years. Some research groups have shown perception systems which are able to capture even complicated urban scenarios in great detail. Yet, what is often missing are general-purpose path- or trajectory planners which are not designed for a specific purpose. In this paper we look at path- and trajectory planning from an architectural point of view and show how model predictive frameworks can contribute to generalized path- and trajectory generation approaches for generating safe trajectories even in cases of system failures.Comment: Presented at IEEE Intelligent Vehicles Symposium 2017, Los Angeles, CA, US

    A Real-time Nonlinear Model Predictive Controller for Yaw Motion Optimization of Distributed Drive Electric Vehicles

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    This paper proposes a real-time nonlinear model predictive control (NMPC) strategy for direct yaw moment control (DYC) of distributed drive electric vehicles (DDEVs). The NMPC strategy is based on a control-oriented model built by integrating a single track vehicle model with the Magic Formula (MF) tire model. To mitigate the NMPC computational cost, the continuation/generalized minimal residual (C/GMRES) algorithm is employed and modified for real-time optimization. Since the traditional C/GMRES algorithm cannot directly solve the inequality constraint problem, the external penalty method is introduced to transform inequality constraints into an equivalently unconstrained optimization problem. Based on the Pontryagin’s minimum principle (PMP), the existence and uniqueness for solution of the proposed C/GMRES algorithm are proven. Additionally, to achieve fast initialization in C/GMRES algorithm, the varying predictive duration is adopted so that the analytic expressions of optimally initial solutions in C/GMRES algorithm can be derived and gained. A Karush-Kuhn-Tucker (KKT) condition based control allocation method distributes the desired traction and yaw moment among four independent motors. Numerical simulations are carried out by combining CarSim and Matlab/Simulink to evaluate the effectiveness of the proposed strategy. Results demonstrate that the real-time NMPC strategy can achieve superior vehicle stability performance, guarantee the given safety constraints, and significantly reduce the computational efforts

    Cooperative lateral vehicle guidance control for automated vehicles with Steer-by-Wire systems

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    With the global trend towards automated driving, fault-tolerant onboard power supply systems are introduced into modern vehicles and the level of driving automation is continuously increasing. These advancements contribute to the applicability of Steer-by-Wire systems and the development of automated lateral vehicle guidance control functions. For the market acceptance of automated driving, the lateral vehicle guidance control function must hereby be cooperative, that is it must accept driver interventions. Existing approaches for automated lateral vehicle guidance commonly do not consider driver interventions. If unconsidered in the control loop, the driver intervention is interpreted as an external disturbance that is actively compensated by feedback. This thesis addresses the development of a cooperative lateral vehicle guidance control concept, which enables a true coexistence between manual steering control by the driver and automated steering control. To this end, the subordinate controls of the Steer-by-Wire system for the manual and automated driving mode are initially presented. These include the steering feel generation and steering torque control of the Steer-by-Wire Handwheel Actuator for the manual driving mode, which is structurally extended to a cascade steering position control for the automated driving mode. Subsequently, a superposition control is introduced, which fuses steering torque and position control. The resulting cooperative Handwheel Actuator control achieves precise tracking of the reference steering position in automated driving mode but accepts driver interventions. Thus, the driver can override the active control and experiences a natural steering feel. The transitions hereby are seamless as no blending, gain scheduling or controller output saturation is required. Subsequently, the superimposed lateral vehicle guidance controller for the automated driving mode is described, which computes the reference steering position for the respective Steer-by-Wire controls. In contrast to existing approaches, the plant model equations are rearranged to isolate the vehicle speed dependent dynamics. Thereafter, the concept of inverse nonlinearity control is employed, using a virtual control loop and feedback linearization for an online inversion of the nonlinear plant dynamics. The remaining plant is fully linear and independent of vehicle speed. Consequently, one controller can be synthesized that is valid for all vehicle speeds. The closed and open loop system thereby have the same dynamics independent of vehicle speed, which significantly simplifies control synthesis, analysis, and performance tuning in the vehicle. For considering the future reference path information and constraints on the maximum steering position within the control law, a linear Model Predictive Controller synthesis is selected. The combination of inverse nonlinearity control and linear Model Predictive Controller thus results in a Nonlinear Adaptive Model Predictive Control concept, which makes commonly applied gain scheduling fully obsolete. The controller is structurally extended by a cooperative dynamic feedforward control for considering driver interventions within the control loop. Consequently, the driver can override the active control and seamlessly modify the lateral vehicle motion. A variety of nonlinear simulation analyses and real vehicle tests demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed control concept

    A path planning and path-following control framework for a general 2-trailer with a car-like tractor

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    Maneuvering a general 2-trailer with a car-like tractor in backward motion is a task that requires significant skill to master and is unarguably one of the most complicated tasks a truck driver has to perform. This paper presents a path planning and path-following control solution that can be used to automatically plan and execute difficult parking and obstacle avoidance maneuvers by combining backward and forward motion. A lattice-based path planning framework is developed in order to generate kinematically feasible and collision-free paths and a path-following controller is designed to stabilize the lateral and angular path-following error states during path execution. To estimate the vehicle state needed for control, a nonlinear observer is developed which only utilizes information from sensors that are mounted on the car-like tractor, making the system independent of additional trailer sensors. The proposed path planning and path-following control framework is implemented on a full-scale test vehicle and results from simulations and real-world experiments are presented.Comment: Preprin

    Gain-scheduling LPV control for autonomous vehicles including friction force estimation and compensation mechanism

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    © 2018 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.This study presents a solution for the integrated longitudinal and lateral control problem of urban autonomousvehicles. It is based on a gain-scheduling linear parameter-varying (LPV) control approach combined with the use of anUnknown Input Observer (UIO) for estimating the vehicle states and friction force. Two gain-scheduling LPV controllers are usedin cascade configuration that use the kinematic and dynamic vehicle models and the friction and observed states provided bythe Unknown Input Observer (UIO). The LPV–UIO is designed in an optimal manner by solving a set of linear matrix inequalities(LMIs). On the other hand, the design of the kinematic and dynamic controllers lead to solve separately two LPV–LinearQuadratic Regulator problems formulated also in LMI form. The UIO allows to improve the control response in disturbanceaffected scenarios by estimating and compensating the friction force. The proposed scheme has been integrated with atrajectory generation module and tested in a simulated scenario. A comparative study is also presented considering the casesthat the friction force estimation is used or not to show its usefulnessPeer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    Trajectory Planning for Autonomous High-Speed Overtaking in Structured Environments using Robust MPC

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    Automated vehicles are increasingly getting mainstreamed and this has pushed development of systems for autonomous manoeuvring (e.g., lane-change, merge, overtake, etc.) to the forefront. A novel framework for situational awareness and trajectory planning to perform autonomous overtaking in high-speed structured environments (e.g., highway, motorway) is presented in this paper. A combination of a potential field like function and reachability sets of a vehicle are used to identify safe zones on a road that the vehicle can navigate towards. These safe zones are provided to a tube-based robust model predictive controller as reference to generate feasible trajectories for combined lateral and longitudinal motion of a vehicle. The strengths of the proposed framework are: (i) it is free from nonconvex collision avoidance constraints, (ii) it ensures feasibility of trajectory even if decelerating or accelerating while performing lateral motion, and (iii) it is real-time implementable. The ability of the proposed framework to plan feasible trajectories for highspeed overtaking is validated in a high-fidelity IPG CarMaker and Simulink co-simulation environment
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