Research on Six-Wheel Distributed Unmanned Vehicle Path Tracking Strategy Based on Hierarchical Control

Biomimetics (Basel). 2022 Dec 12;7(4):238. doi: 10.3390/biomimetics7040238.

Abstract

For the multi-objective control problem of tracking effect and vehicle stability in the path tracking process of six-wheel distributed unmanned vehicles, a control strategy based on hierarchical control (HC) theory is proposed. A hierarchical kinematic model is designed considering the structural advantages of independent steering and independent driving of the unmanned vehicle, and this model is applied to the path tracking strategy. The strategy is divided into two levels of control. The upper level of control is to use the upper-level kinematic model as the prediction model of model predictive control (MPC), and to convert the solution problem of future control increments into the optimal solution problem of quadratic programming by setting the optimal objective function and constraints. The lower level of control is to map the optimal control quantities obtained from the upper level control to the six-wheel speeds and the four-wheel turning angles through the lower-level kinematics, and to design the six-wheel torque distribution rules based on deterministic torque and stability-based slip rate control for executing the control requirements of the upper level controller to prevent the unmanned vehicle from generating sideslip and precisely generating transverse moment to ensure the stable driving of the unmanned vehicle. Experiments were conducted on the Trucksim/Simulink simulation platform for a variety of road conditions, and the results showed that hierarchical control improved the accuracy of tracking the desired path and the driving stability on complex road surfaces more than MPC.

Keywords: MPC; deterministic torque; distributed unmanned vehicle; hierarchical control.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by “Research on the power transmission mechanism of high-smooth small spherical power source and analysis of its working characteristics” (project approval no. 51705525), by “Research on a high-efficiency hydraulic actuator based on imitating the multi-motor unit structure and the control mechanism of human muscles” (project approval no. 51675522) and by “Numerical simulation of the combustion process in the ring working chambers of the Twin-rotor Piston Engine” (project approval no. 2017JJ3355).