Abstract

This paper focuses on the steering motion control of an in-wheel motor-drive robot. The influence of the pulse-width modulation (PWM) duty cycle on steering motion and the steering control method have not yet been proved. Thus, this study aimed to design a steering controller for the off-center steer-by-wire system of a robot. The influence of the PWM duty cycle on the steering motion under different conditions is firstly tested on a test bench. Based on the optimal duty cycles of different cases found in the test, a two-stage fuzzy controller of the duty cycle is designed for the steering system. The first stage of the controller is used to dynamically adjust the PWM duty cycle of the electromagnetic friction lock (EFL). The second stage is designed to realize the self-tuning of the fuzzy controller’s quantization factor and the scale factor. Through two-stage control, the motion of the in-wheel motor and the EFL can be coordinated to realize stable and rapid steering. Considering the robots’ primary application in field roads at present, road tests were ultimately conducted to verify the proposed method. The test results show that the angle response rate of the steering arm is elevated with the increase in the steering angle signal. The proposed controller can sensitively track the target angles with smaller overshoot, yaw rate and lateral acceleration, and better steering accuracy than the PID (proportional–integral–differential) controller under different working conditions.

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