Title :
Automated lane change controller design
Author :
Hatipoglu, Cem ; Özgüner, Ümit ; Redmill, Keith A.
Author_Institution :
Honeywell Bendix Commercial Vehicle Syst., Elyria, OH, USA
fDate :
3/1/2003 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The primary focus of study in this paper is the background control theory for automated lane change maneuvers. We provide an analytic approach for the systematic development of controllers that will cause an autonomous vehicle to accomplish a smooth lane change suitable for use in an Automated Highway System. The design is motivated by the discontinuous availability of valid preview data from the sensing systems during lane-to-lane transitions. The task is accomplished by the generation of a virtual yaw reference and the utilization of a robust switching controller to generate steering commands that cause the vehicle to track that reference. In this way, the open loop lane change problem is converted into an equivalent virtual reference trajectory tracking problem. The approach considers optimality in elapsed time at an operating longitudinal velocity. Although the analysis is performed assuming that the road is straight, the generalization of the proposed algorithm to arbitrary road segments is rather straightforward. The outlined lane change algorithm has been implemented and tested on The Ohio State University test vehicles. Some of the experimental results are presented at the conclusion of this paper.
Keywords :
automated highways; driver information systems; mobile robots; robust control; automated highway system; automated lane change controller design; controllers; lane-to-lane transitions; mobile robots; open loop lane change problem; robust switching controller; sensing systems; steering commands; virtual reference trajectory tracking; virtual yaw reference; Automated highways; Automatic control; Automatic generation control; Control systems; Control theory; Mobile robots; Remotely operated vehicles; Road vehicles; Robust control; Testing;
Journal_Title :
Intelligent Transportation Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TITS.2003.811644