4.7 Article

Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control With Robustness Against Communication Delay: An Approach in the Space Domain

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TITS.2020.2987746

Keywords

Communication delay; cooperative adaptive cruise control (CACC); local stability; space domain; string stability

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [71871163, 61803284]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [1600219316]
  3. Shanghai Yangfan Program [18YF1424200]
  4. Chinese Scholarship Council (CSC) [201806260147]

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In this research, an optimal control-based Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control (CACC) system is proposed, which enforces a target time gap between platoon members in the space domain and models third-order vehicle dynamics for improved control precision. The system demonstrates improved robustness, safety, and stability, outperforming existing controllers in terms of fuel consumption and CO2 emission reduction. With a fast computation speed, the proposed system shows potential for real-time application.
In this research, an optimal control-based Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control (CACC) system is proposed. The proposed system is able to enforce a target time gap between platoon members and is formulated in the space domain instead of the time domain which is adopted by most optimal control-based CACC systems in the past. By having this change, its robustness against communication failure is greatly improved and thus minimum safety headway buffer is reduced which leads to better mobility. In addition, third-order vehicle dynamics are modeled into the proposed control in order to improve control precision when implemented in the field. Local stability and string stability are theoretically proven. The proposed system is evaluated by simulation. Results reveal that the proposed CACC system outperforms the state-of-the-art H-infinity synthesis-based controller and linear feedback-based controller. The benefit of fuel consumption reduction ranges from 0.35% to 16.11%, while the benefit of CO2 emission ranges from 0.48% to 12.40%. Furthermore, the proposed CACC improves local stability from 11.03% to 25.90%, and string stability by up to 23.82%. The computation speed of the proposed method is 1.26 ms (with prediction horizon as 1.5 s and resolution as 0.1 s) on a regular laptop which indicates the proposed system's potential to be applied in real-time.

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