TY - JOUR
T1 - Economic Adaptive Cruise Control for a Power Split Hybrid Electric Vehicle
AU - Liu, Haiou
AU - Miao, Chengsheng
AU - Zhu, Guoming G.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2000-2011 IEEE.
PY - 2020/10
Y1 - 2020/10
N2 - An extended adaptive cruise control (ACC), called economic adaptive cruise control, is proposed to improve the fuel economy for power split hybrid electric vehicles (HEV) by optimizing the vehicle route, speed, and powertrain control simultaneously. The economic route and speed for a given origin-destination pair with the given expected trip time are optimized by a proposed vehicle macroscopic motion planning method, where the powertrain is optimized by a proposed global power distribution (GPD) strategy. The HEV powertrain controller, consisting of feedforward and feedback control schemes, is developed for real-time cruise control, where the former is based on the GPD strategy and the latter is based on the receding horizon linear quadratic tracking method. In addition, a mode-switch local optimization method is used to modify the reference speed for passing, traffic jam and light crossing. A co-simulation model, combining the SUMO traffic model and Simulink hybrid powertrain model, is developed and used for validating the proposed EACC strategy. The co-simulation results indicate that the proposed EACC is able to decrease the fuel consumption by more than 30% comparing with the power follower strategy adopting the fastest route. Note that even with the same powertrain controller, the economic route and speed stratgey is able to improve the fuel economy by 14.21%, comparing with the fastest route without optimization.
AB - An extended adaptive cruise control (ACC), called economic adaptive cruise control, is proposed to improve the fuel economy for power split hybrid electric vehicles (HEV) by optimizing the vehicle route, speed, and powertrain control simultaneously. The economic route and speed for a given origin-destination pair with the given expected trip time are optimized by a proposed vehicle macroscopic motion planning method, where the powertrain is optimized by a proposed global power distribution (GPD) strategy. The HEV powertrain controller, consisting of feedforward and feedback control schemes, is developed for real-time cruise control, where the former is based on the GPD strategy and the latter is based on the receding horizon linear quadratic tracking method. In addition, a mode-switch local optimization method is used to modify the reference speed for passing, traffic jam and light crossing. A co-simulation model, combining the SUMO traffic model and Simulink hybrid powertrain model, is developed and used for validating the proposed EACC strategy. The co-simulation results indicate that the proposed EACC is able to decrease the fuel consumption by more than 30% comparing with the power follower strategy adopting the fastest route. Note that even with the same powertrain controller, the economic route and speed stratgey is able to improve the fuel economy by 14.21%, comparing with the fastest route without optimization.
KW - Economic adaptive cruise control
KW - global power distribution
KW - hybrid electric vehicle
KW - linear quadratic tracking
KW - vehicle macroscopic motion planning
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85087186203&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TITS.2019.2938923
DO - 10.1109/TITS.2019.2938923
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85087186203
SN - 1524-9050
VL - 21
SP - 4161
EP - 4170
JO - IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems
JF - IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems
IS - 10
M1 - 8835105
ER -