Lateral String Stability for Vehicle Platoons: Formulation, Definition, and Analysis
Sixu Li, Swaroop Darbha, Yang Zhou

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new framework for analyzing lateral string stability in vehicle platoons, emphasizing safety-critical path-tracking errors and proposing control strategies with and without vehicle-to-vehicle communication.
Contribution
It formulates a novel arc-length based approach for lateral string stability analysis and compares onboard sensing versus V2V communication strategies.
Findings
Onboard sensing alone cannot guarantee error attenuation.
V2V communication enables true error attenuation.
Nonzero feedback on specific measurements is essential for stability.
Abstract
Platooning of connected and automated vehicles provides significant benefits in terms of energy efficiency, traffic throughput, and, most critically, safety. These safety benefits depend on string stability, which dictates how disturbances propagate along a vehicle string. Although longitudinal string stability has been extensively examined, lateral string stability, which governs the propagation of path-tracking errors that can lead to unsafe deviations from the desired path, remains underexplored. Its importance is growing as autonomous vehicles increasingly depend on onboard sensing and map-free navigation, where sensor occlusions and tight formations amplify safety risks. This paper presents a framework for lateral string stability that focuses directly on safety-critical, path-relative tracking errors and enables consistent comparison across vehicles that follow the same planned…
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