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Traction control of an electric vehicle with four in-wheel motorsHajihosseinlu, Amin January 2015 (has links)
This thesis evaluates an electric vehicle with four independently-controlled in-wheel
electric motors. The electric vehicle investigated in this work requires a main con-
troller that not only coordinates with each individual motor drive controller, but is
also needed to distribute torque and power to each in-wheel motor. The controller
adjusts the speed of each motor to the driving conditions according to the require-
ments and emulates the behavior of a mechanical di erential. Then, in addition to
the electronic di erential controller, a simple yet robust control strategy for maximiz-
ing traction force between tire and road is developed and presented. Moreover, the
controller continuously senses the yaw rate and prevents over- and under-steering by
adjusting the torque on the right or left wheels. Simulation and experimental results
validate the proposed strategy.
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Design And Simulation Of A Traction Control System For An Integrated Active Safety System For Road VehiclesOktay, Gorkem 01 December 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Active safety systems for road vehicles make a crucial preventive contribution to road safety. In recent years, technological developments and the increasing demand for road safety have resulted in the integration and cooperation of these individual active safety systems. Traction control system (TCS) is one of these individual systems, which is capable of inhibiting wheel-spin during acceleration of the vehicle on slippery surfaces.
In this thesis, design methodology and simulation results of a traction control system for four wheeled road vehicles are presented. The objective of the TCS controller is basically to improve directional stability, steer-ability and acceleration performance of vehicle by controlling the wheel slip during acceleration.
In this study, the designed traction control system based on fuzzy logic is composed of an engine torque controller and a slip controller. Reference wheel slip values were estimated from the longitudinal acceleration data of the vehicle. Engine torque controller determines the throttle opening angle corresponding to the desired wheel torque, which is determined by a slip controller to track the reference slip signals. The wheel torques delivered by the engine are compensated by brake torques according to the desired wheel torque determined by the slip controller. Performance of the TCS controller was analyzed through several simulations held in MATLAB/Simulink for different road conditions during straight line acceleration and combined acceleration and steering. For simulations, an 8 DOF nonlinear vehicle model with nonlinear tires and a 2 DOF nonlinear engine model were built.
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