4.6 Article

Observer-Based Coordinated Control for Blended Braking System with Actuator Delay

Journal

ACTUATORS
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/act10080193

Keywords

time-delay observer; friction braking torque observer; sliding mode control; Smith Predictor

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [62073311]
  2. Key Program of Natural Science Foundation of Shenzhen [JCYJ20200109115403807, JCYJ20200109115414354]
  3. Science and Technology Development Fund, Macao S.A.R. (FDCT) [0015/2019/AKP]
  4. Shenzhen Institute of Artificial Intelligence and Robotics for Society
  5. Guang-Dong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation [2020B515130004]

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The study presents a coordinated control system for blended braking systems, which effectively addresses the challenges posed by braking actuator time-delay and unmeasurable states, leading to improved braking performance.
The coordinated control of a blended braking system is always a difficult task. In particular, blended braking control becomes more challenging when the braking actuator has an input time-delay and some states of the braking system cannot be measured. In order to improve the tracking performance, a coordinated control system was designed based on the input time-delay and state observation for a blended braking system comprising a motor braking system and friction braking system. The coordinated control consists of three parts: Sliding mode control, a multi-input single-output observer, and time-delay estimation-based Smith Predictor control. The sliding mode control is used to calculate the total command braking torque according to the desired braking performance and vehicle states. The multi-input single-output observer is used to simultaneously estimate the input time-delay and output braking torque of the friction braking system. With time-delay estimation-based Smith Predictor control, the friction braking system is able to effectively track the command braking torque of the friction braking system. The tracking of command braking torque is realized through the coordinated control of the motor braking system and friction braking system. In order to validate the effectiveness of the proposed approach, numerical simulations on a quarter-vehicle braking model were performed.

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