Abstract

Aiming at the yaw stability problem of a four-wheel independent-drive electric vehicle (EV) during steering, this paper proposes an adaptive sliding mode control strategy (ASMC) for yaw stability based on the phase plane. The control strategy adopts hierarchical control. The upper layer is the ASMC controllers based on particle swarm optimization (PSO). Aiming at the chattering problem of sliding mode controller, the approach law is designed as the adaptive approach law, which changes with the change of system state by using the adaptive control principle; to minimize the response delay and tracking error, the control system is taken as the object to find a set of optimal parameters for a constant velocity approach rate based on PSO. The middle level is a joint controller, which uses the established β−β˙ phase plane stability region boundary model to control the upper-level controllers jointly. When the vehicle is in the stable region, the ASMC controller for the yaw rate is used to determine the yaw moment; when the vehicle is outside the stable region, the final yaw moment is determined by the ASMC controller for the yaw rate and the ASMC controller for the sideslip angle, to restore the stability of the vehicle. The lower layer is a torque optimal distribution controller, which converts the yaw moment into torque and optimally distributes it to four wheels. Finally, Simulink and CarSim platforms are used for joint simulation. The results prove that the proposed control strategy can effectively reduce the error between the actual and the ideal value of control parameters and improve the vehicle’s stability when steering.

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