Design of integrated autonomous driving control system that incorporates chassis controllers for improving path tracking performance and vehicle stability

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Abstract

This paper describes an integrated autonomous driving (AD) control system for an autonomous vehicle with four independent in‐wheel motors (IWMs). The system consists of two parts: the AD controller and the chassis controller. These elements are functionally integrated to improve vehicle stability and path tracking performance. The vehicle is assumed to employ an IWM independently at each wheel. The AD controller implements longitudinal/lateral path tracking using proportional‐integral(PI) control and adaptive model predictive control. The chassis controller is composed of two lateral control units: the active front steering (AFS) control and the torque vectoring (TV) control. Jointly, they find the yaw moment to maintain vehicle stability using sliding mode control; AFS is prioritized over TV to enhance safety margin and energy saving. Then, the command yaw moment is optimally distributed to each wheel by solving a constrained least‐squares problem. Validation was performed using simulation in a double lane change sce-nario. The simulation results show that the integrated AD control system of this paper significantly improves the path tracking capability and vehicle stability in comparison with other control sys-tems.

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APA

Ahn, T., Lee, Y., & Park, K. (2021). Design of integrated autonomous driving control system that incorporates chassis controllers for improving path tracking performance and vehicle stability. Electronics (Switzerland), 10(2), 1–23. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics10020144

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