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Discover the latest research in path planning and robust path tracking control
In Autonomous Road Vehicle Path Planning and Tracking Control, a team of distinguished researchers delivers a practical and insightful exploration of how to design robust path tracking control. The authors include easy to understand concepts that are immediately applicable to the work of practicing control engineers and graduate students working in autonomous driving applications. Controller parameters are presented graphically, and regions of guaranteed performance are simple to visualize and understand.
The book discusses the limits of performance, as well as hardware-in-the-loop simulation and experimental results that are implementable in real-time. Concepts of collision and avoidance are explained within the same framework and a strong focus on the robustness of the introduced tracking controllers is maintained throughout.
In addition to a continuous treatment of complex planning and control in one relevant application, the Autonomous Road Vehicle Path Planning and Tracking Control includes:
Perfect for advanced undergraduate and graduate students with an interest in autonomous vehicles, Autonomous Road Vehicle Path Planning and Tracking Control is also an indispensable reference for practicing engineers working in autonomous driving technologies and the mobility groups and sections of automotive OEMs.
Auteur
Levent Güvenç, PhD, is Professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Ohio State University, USA.
Bilin Aksun-Güvenç, PhD, is Professor in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at Ohio State University, USA. Sheng Zhu is a Software Engineer on planning and control at DeepRoute.ai with a PhD from the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at Ohio State University, USA. ükrü Yaren Gelbal is Graduate Research Associate in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Ohio State University, USA.
Contenu
Author biographies
Preface
Abbreviations
Chapter 1. Introduction 1
1.1 Motivation and Introduction 1
1.2 History of Automated Driving 4
1.3 ADAS to Autonomous Driving 13
1.4 Autonomous Driving Architectures 14
1.5 Cybersecurity Considerations 15
1.6 Organization and Scope of the Book 16
1.7 Chapter Summary and Concluding Remarks 16
References 16
Chapter 2. Vehicle, Path and Path Tracking Models 21
2.1 Tire Force Model 21
2.1.1 Introduction 21
2.1.2 Tire forces/moments and slip 22
2.1.3 Longitudinal tire force modeling 25
2.1.4 Lateral tire force modeling 28
2.1.5 Self-aligning moment model 30
2.1.6 Coupling of tire forces 32
2.2 Vehicle longitudinal dynamics model 37
2.3 Vehicle Lateral Dynamics Model 41
2.3.1 Geometry of cornering 41
2.3.2 Single track lateral vehicle model 43
2.3.3 Augmented single track lateral vehicle model 47
2.3.4 Linearized single track lateral vehicle model 48
2.4 Path Model 52
2.5 Pure Pursuit: Geometry Based Low Speed Path Tracking 58
2.6 Stanley Method for Path Tracking 59
2.7 Path Tracking in Reverse Driving and Parking 62
2.8 Chapter Summary and Concluding Remarks 63
References 63
Chapter 3. Simulation, Experimentation and Estimation Overview 65
3.1 Introduction to the Simulation Based Development and Evaluation Process 65
3.2 Model-in-the-Loop Simulation 68
3.2.1 Linear and Nonlinear Vehicle Simulation Models 68
3.2.2 Higher Fidelity Vehicle Simulation Models 69
3.3 Virtual Environments Used in Simulation 71
3.3.1 Road Network Creation 71
3.3.2 Driving Environment Construction 73
3.3.3 Capabilities 77
3.4 Hardware-in-the-Loop Simulation 82
3.5 Experimental Vehicle Testbeds 84
3.5.1 Unified Approach 84
3.5.2 Unified AV Functions and Sensors Library 87
3.6 Estimation 88
3.6.1 Estimation of the Effective Tire Radius 88
3.6.2 Slip Slope Method for Road Friction Coefficient Estimation 89
3.6.3 Results and Discussion 92
3.7 Chapter Summary and Concluding Remarks 97
References 97
Chapter 4. Path Description and Generation 100
4.1 Introduction 100
4.2 Discrete Waypoint Representation 100
4.3 Parametric Path Description 103
4.3.1 Clothoids 104
4.3.2 Bezier Curves 107
4.3.3 Polynomial Spline Description 108
4.4 Tracking Error Calculation 113
4.5 Conclusions 114
References 115
Chapter 5. Collision Free Path Planning 117
5.1 Introduction 117
5.2 Elastic Band Method 121
5.2.1 Path Structure 121
5.2.2 Calculation of Forces 121
5.2.3 Reaching Equilibrium Point 124
5.2.4 Selected Scenarios 125
5.2.5 Results 127
5.3 Path Planning with Minimum Curvature Variation 135
5.3.1 Optimization based on G2-quintic Splines Path Description 135
5.3.2 Reduction of Computation Cost using Lookup Tables 138
5.3.3 Geometry-based Collision-free Target Points Generation 142
5.3.4 Simulation Results 145
5.4 Model-based Trajectory Planning 148
5.4.1 Problem Formulation 148
5.4.2 Parameterized Vehicle Control 149
5.4.3 Constrained Optimization on Curvature Control 150
5.4.4 Sampling of the Longitudinal Movements 155
5.4.5 Trajectory Evaluation and Selection 157
5.4.6 Integration of Road Friction Coefficient Estimation for Safety Enhancement 159
5.4.7 Simulation Results in Complex Scenarios 162
5.5 Chapter Summary and Concluding Remarks 169
References 170
Chapter 6. Path Tracking Model Regulation 174 6.1 Intr...