SYSYJan 23, 2017

Robust Distributed Control Protocols for Large Vehicular Platoons with Prescribed Transient and Steady State Performance

arXiv:1701.0643897 citationsh-index: 65
AI Analysis

For autonomous vehicle platooning, this work provides robust distributed control that prevents collisions and maintains connectivity, addressing practical sensor limitations.

This paper proposes fully distributed control protocols for large vehicular platoons with unknown nonlinear dynamics, achieving prescribed transient and steady-state performance without requiring model knowledge. Simulation and real-time experiments validate the approach.

In this paper, we study the longitudinal control problem for a platoon of vehicles with unknown nonlinear dynamics under both the predecessor-following and the bidirectional control architectures. The proposed control protocols are fully distributed in the sense that each vehicle utilizes feedback from its relative position with respect to its preceding and following vehicles as well as its own velocity, which can all be easily obtained by onboard sensors. Moreover, no previous knowledge of model nonlinearities/disturbances is incorporated in the control design, enhancing in that way the robustness of the overall closed loop system against model imperfections. Additionally, certain designer-specified performance functions determine the transient and steady-state response, thus preventing connectivity breaks due to sensor limitations as well as inter-vehicular collisions. Finally, extensive simulation studies and a real-time experiment conducted with mobile robots clarify the proposed control protocols and verify their effectiveness.

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