Date of Award
8-31-2022
Publication Type
Thesis
Degree Name
M.A.Sc.
Department
Mechanical, Automotive, and Materials Engineering
Keywords
cruise control;Electric Vehicle;MATLAB-Simulink;Sliding Mode Control;Torque Vectoring Control;yaw acceleration
Supervisor
Bruce Minaker
Abstract
This study investigates a method for enhancing Battery Electric Vehicle (BEV) longitudinal and lateral stability in a broad range of conditions. As with the state-of-the-art, a hierarchical control is developed: the upper layer uses vehicle state errors and predicted yaw acceleration in order to generate a corrective yaw moment using a sliding mode control (SMC); the lower layer distributes the total requested torque to the electric motors using a vertical-load-based torque distribution algorithm. The main contribution of this work is the additional term inside the yaw moment controller: the expected yaw acceleration of the vehicle is predicted, allowing a more effective action of the controller and thus reducing path errors. Another contribution of this work is the development of a sliding mode-based cruise control, featuring good responsiveness when the velocity error is high and robustness when it approaches zero. The proposed control system is verified in the MATLAB-Simulink environment, using a seven degree of freedom vehicle model (longitudinal, lateral, yaw and rotation of each wheel) and the bicycle model as reference model. Several simulations under different driving scenarios are run and the results are discussed, highlighting the merit of the proposed control strategy. Furthermore, the simulation environment that has been built allows the benchmarking of different BEV architectures. When changing the number and position of the electric motors, the developed integrated vehicle stability controller is able to split the required torque among the available motors in order to optimize available traction depending on the vehicle configuration.
Recommended Citation
Ninfa, Riccardo, "Torque Vectoring Controls for Multi-architecture Battery Electric Vehicles" (2022). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 9599.
https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/etd/9599