Coordinated Control of Path Tracking and Yaw Stability for Distributed Drive Electric Vehicle Based on AMPC and DYC
Dongmei Wu, Yuying Guan, Xin Xia, Changqing Du, Fuwu Yan, Yang Li, Min, Hua, Wei Liu

TL;DR
This paper presents a hierarchical coordinated control strategy combining adaptive model predictive control and direct yaw moment control to enhance path-tracking accuracy and yaw stability in distributed drive electric vehicles under various driving conditions.
Contribution
A novel hierarchical control framework integrating AMPC and DYC for DDEVs, with adaptive prediction horizon and weight coefficients based on vehicle speed, improving stability and accuracy.
Findings
Yaw stability improved by up to 44.30% under certain conditions.
Path-tracking accuracy increased by up to 14.43%.
Effective across different speeds and low adhesion conditions.
Abstract
Maintaining both path-tracking accuracy and yaw stability of distributed drive electric vehicles (DDEVs) under various driving conditions presents a significant challenge in the field of vehicle control. To address this limitation, a coordinated control strategy that integrates adaptive model predictive control (AMPC) path-tracking control and direct yaw moment control (DYC) is proposed for DDEVs. The proposed strategy, inspired by a hierarchical framework, is coordinated by the upper layer of path-tracking control and the lower layer of direct yaw moment control. Based on the linear time-varying model predictive control (LTV MPC) algorithm, the effects of prediction horizon and weight coefficients on the path-tracking accuracy and yaw stability of the vehicle are compared and analyzed first. According to the aforementioned analysis, an AMPC path-tracking controller with variable…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsVehicle Dynamics and Control Systems · Electric and Hybrid Vehicle Technologies · Mechanical Engineering and Vibrations Research
