Abstract

This article presents an improved method of obtaining lateral stability regions for road vehicles, considering the influence of steering angle, center of gravity, longitudinal speed, and tire-road friction coefficient on the vehicle dynamics. Comprehensive stability regions are obtained for a wide range of such parameters. Moreover, conservative stability regions are proposed, in the case of control applications that demand robust or safety-critical control actions. Next, a steering-angle-dependent region is used to implement a safety-critical electronic stability control system with active front steering as actuation. The resulting control system extends safety-critical control based on control-dependent barrier functions, introducing a control-dependent Lyapunov function to improve its steady-state behavior. Finally, we identify and propose workarounds for problems that arise from the number of inputs being less than the dimension of the desired safe set. The conservative stability regions and the extended safety-critical control system are validated by means of simulation results based on a nonlinear lateral stability model.

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