2 research outputs found

    Feasibility of a neural network-based virtual sensor for vehicle unsprung mass relative velocity estimation

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    With the automotive industry moving towards automated driving, sensing is increasingly important in enabling technology. The virtual sensors allow data fusion from various vehicle sensors and provide a prediction for measurement that is hard or too expensive to measure in another way or in the case of demand on continuous detection. In this paper, virtual sensing is discussed for the case of vehicle suspension control, where information about the relative velocity of the unsprung mass for each vehicle corner is required. The corresponding goal can be identified as a regression task with multi-input sequence input. The hypothesis is that the state-of-art method of Bidirectional Long–Short Term Memory (BiLSTM) can solve it. In this paper, a virtual sensor has been proposed and developed by training a neural network model. The simulations have been performed using an experimentally validated full vehicle model in IPG Carmaker. Simulations provided the reference data which were used for Neural Network (NN) training. The extensive dataset covering 26 scenarios has been used to obtain training, validation and testing data. The Bayesian Search was used to select the best neural network structure using root mean square error as a metric. The best network is made of 167 BiLSTM, 256 fully connected hidden units and 4 output units. Error histograms and spectral analysis of the predicted signal compared to the reference signal are presented. The results demonstrate the good applicability of neural network-based virtual sensors to estimate vehicle unsprung mass relative velocity

    Deep neural network based data-driven virtual sensor in vehicle semi-active suspension real-time control

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    This research presents a data-driven Neural Network (NN)-based Virtual Sensor (VS) that estimates vehicles’ Unsprung Mass (UM) vertical velocity in real-time. UM vertical velocity is an input parameter used to control a vehicle’s semi-active suspension. The extensive simulation-based dataset covering 95 scenarios was created and used to obtain training, validation and testing data for Deep Neural Network (DNN). The simulations have been performed with an experimentally validated full vehicle model using software for advanced vehicle dynamics simulation. VS was developed and tested, taking into account the Root Mean Square (RMS) of Sprung Mass (SM) acceleration as a comfort metric. The RMS was calculated for two cases: using actual UM velocity and estimations from the VS as input to the suspension controller. The comparison shows that RMS change is less than the difference threshold that vehicle occupants could perceive. The achieved result indicates the great potential of using the proposed VS in place of the physical sensor in vehicles
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