Emergent Mind

Abstract

The unknown sharp changes of vehicle acceleration rates, also called the unknown jerk dynamics, may significantly affect the driving performance of the leader vehicle in a platoon, resulting in more drastic car-following movements in platooning tracking control, which could cause safety and traffic capacity concerns. To address these issues, in this paper, we investigate cooperative platooning tracking control and intermittent optimization problems for connected automated vehicles (CAVs) with a nonlinear car-following model. We assume that the external inputs of the leader CAV contain unknown but bounded jerk parameters, and the acceleration signals of the leader CAV are known only to a few neighboring follower CAVs in a free-design but directed communication network. To solve these problems, a distributed observer law is developed to provide a reference signal expressed as an estimated unknown jerk dynamic of the leader CAV and implemented by each follower CAV. Then, a novel distributed platooning tracking control protocol is proposed to construct the cooperative tracking controllers under identical inter-vehicle constraints, which can ensure a desired safety distance among the CAVs and allow each follower CAV to track their leader CAV by using only local information interaction. We also present a novel intermittent sampling condition and a robust intermittent optimization design that can ensure optimally scheduled feedback gains for the cooperative platooning tracking controllers to minimize the control cost under nonidentical inter-vehicle constraints and unknown jerk dynamics. Simulation case studies are carried out to illustrate the effectiveness of the proposed approaches

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