ROLGDec 3, 2025

Digital Twin-based Control Co-Design of Full Vehicle Active Suspensions via Deep Reinforcement Learning

arXiv:2512.03891v11 citationsh-index: 6
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of limited adaptability in vehicle active suspension systems for automotive engineers and manufacturers, representing an incremental advance through integration of existing technologies.

This work tackles the challenge of optimizing active suspension systems by developing a digital twin-based control co-design framework that integrates deep reinforcement learning with uncertainty-aware model updating, achieving reductions in control effort of approximately 43% and 52% for mild and aggressive driving settings while maintaining ride comfort and stability.

Active suspension systems are critical for enhancing vehicle comfort, safety, and stability, yet their performance is often limited by fixed hardware designs and control strategies that cannot adapt to uncertain and dynamic operating conditions. Recent advances in digital twins (DTs) and deep reinforcement learning (DRL) offer new opportunities for real-time, data-driven optimization across a vehicle's lifecycle. However, integrating these technologies into a unified framework remains an open challenge. This work presents a DT-based control co-design (CCD) framework for full-vehicle active suspensions using multi-generation design concepts. By integrating automatic differentiation into DRL, we jointly optimize physical suspension components and control policies under varying driver behaviors and environmental uncertainties. DRL also addresses the challenge of partial observability, where only limited states can be sensed and fed back to the controller, by learning optimal control actions directly from available sensor information. The framework incorporates model updating with quantile learning to capture data uncertainty, enabling real-time decision-making and adaptive learning from digital-physical interactions. The approach demonstrates personalized optimization of suspension systems under two distinct driving settings (mild and aggressive). Results show that the optimized systems achieve smoother trajectories and reduce control efforts by approximately 43% and 52% for mild and aggressive, respectively, while maintaining ride comfort and stability. Contributions include: developing a DT-enabled CCD framework integrating DRL and uncertainty-aware model updating for full-vehicle active suspensions, introducing a multi-generation design strategy for self-improving systems, and demonstrating personalized optimization of active suspension systems for distinct driver types.

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