DocumentCode
2536309
Title
Active vehicle suspension control using intelligent feedback linearization
Author
Buckner, Gregory D. ; Schuetze, Karl T. ; Beno, Joe H.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Mech. & Aerosp. Eng., North Carolina State Univ., Raleigh, NC, USA
Volume
6
fYear
2000
fDate
2000
Firstpage
4014
Abstract
Effective control of ride quality and handling performance are challenges for active vehicle suspension systems, particularly for off-road applications. Off-road vehicles experience large suspension displacements, where the nonlinear kinematics and damping characteristics of suspension elements are significant. These nonlinearities tend to degrade the performance of active suspension systems, introducing harshness to the ride quality and reducing off-road mobility. Typical control strategies rely on linear time-invariant models of the suspension dynamics. While these models are convenient, nominally accurate, and tractable due to the abundance of linear control techniques, they neglect the nonlinearities and time-varying dynamics present in real suspension systems. One approach to improving the effectiveness of active vehicle suspension systems, while preserving the benefits of linear control techniques, is to estimate and cancel the nonlinearities using feedback linearization. In this paper, the authors demonstrate an intelligent parameter estimation approach, using structured artificial neural networks, that continually “learns” the nonlinear parameter variations of a quarter-car suspension model. This estimation algorithm becomes the foundation for an intelligent feedback linearization (IFL) controller for active vehicle suspensions. Results are presented for real-time experimental tests and field evaluations on a military HMMWV. These results clearly demonstrate the viability and effectiveness of this approach as a tool for rapid, online development of vehicle suspension models and controllers
Keywords
computational complexity; damping; feedback; intelligent control; kinematics; linearisation techniques; neurocontrollers; nonlinear control systems; parameter estimation; vehicles; vibration control; IFL controller; LTI models; active vehicle suspension control performance; damping characteristics; handling performance; intelligent feedback linearization; intelligent feedback linearization controller; intelligent parameter estimation; linear control techniques; linear time-invariant models; military HMMWV; nonlinear kinematics; nonlinear parameter variations; off-road vehicles; quarter-car suspension model; rapid online development; real-time experimental tests; ride quality; structured artificial neural networks; suspension elements; time-varying dynamics; Artificial intelligence; Control nonlinearities; Control systems; Intelligent control; Intelligent vehicles; Kinematics; Linear feedback control systems; Neurofeedback; Nonlinear control systems; Vehicle dynamics;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
American Control Conference, 2000. Proceedings of the 2000
Conference_Location
Chicago, IL
ISSN
0743-1619
Print_ISBN
0-7803-5519-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ACC.2000.876976
Filename
876976
Link To Document