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7 Summary
of identifying state variables that contribute to the estimation of the friction potential is
presented. Unlikemostof thepublished frictionestimationapproaches thatuseheuristic
strategies, a sensitivity analysis was performed on a vehicle model described by ordinary
differential equations (ODE) in order to identify the state variables that show a high
sensitivity with respect to a change of the friction potential. To this end, different ma-
noeuvres were simulated to cover longitudinal and lateral accelerations that are within
physically possible limits and in a range in which vehicles are frequently driven. The
resultsof theseanalyses showedthat, independentof the longitudinaland lateralacceler-
ation, thewheel’s rotational speedhave thehighest sensitivity toachange in the friction
potential. As the dynamic response of the body to a driver input is slow compared to
the wheel’s reaction, the state variables describing the vehicle body’s state are omitted
for estimation of the friction potential within the present thesis.
Thefifthchapter (Tire/road friction estimator) includes themainpartof this thesis,
which is the presentation of the observer used to estimate the friction potential during
driving. First, ageneral introductiontotheparticlefilter,which isanobserverwithinthe
Bayesian framework, was given. It enables the observation of non-linear internal states
that are difficult or impossible to measure and is also able to deal with measurements
that are subject to noise and inaccuracies. Second, the system model to be observed
was presented, which was chosen based on the results of the sensitivity analysis. Using
the wheel’s angular momentum, the longitudinal tire forces of all four wheels are calcu-
lated. Within the particle filter, these are then compared to hypothetical longitudinal
tire forces that are calculated for different values of the friction potential. In a third
part of this chapter, information on signal processing of the measurement inputs was
offered, as well as a discussion of the challenges to achieving the necessary signal quality.
It was demonstrated that the accuracy with which the wheel’s longitudinal slip can be
calculated is the main limiting factor for the proposed estimation procedure. Among
other values, the vehicle’s longitudinal velocity is required to calculate the longitudinal
slip. Toachieve the requiredaccuracyof thevelocitymeasurement, velocity signals from
global navigation satellite system (GNSS) combined with inertial measurements had to
be used, in addition to ESC standard sensors. The velocity estimator was not part of
this thesis.
The sixth chapter (Results and conclusion) applied the estimation results obtained
using the proposed observer to real vehicle measurements. Different driving states were
investigated, including accelerating and braking, as well as changing road conditions (µ
129
Maximum Tire-Road Friction Coefficient Estimation
- Titel
- Maximum Tire-Road Friction Coefficient Estimation
- Autor
- Cornelia Lex
- Verlag
- Verlag der Technischen Universität Graz
- Ort
- Graz
- Datum
- 2015
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-85125-423-5
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 189
- Kategorie
- Technik