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Journal ArticleDOI

Fault-tolerant drive-by-wire systems

Rolf Isermann, +2 more
- 07 Nov 2002 - 
- Vol. 22, Iss: 5, pp 64-81
TLDR
In this paper, a review of electronic driver assisting systems such as ABS, traction control, electronic stability control, and brake assistant is presented, along with fault-detection methods for use in low-cost components.
Abstract
The article begins with a review of electronic driver assisting systems such as ABS, traction control, electronic stability control, and brake assistant. We then review drive-by-wire systems with and without mechanical backup. Drive-by-wire systems consist of an operating unit with an electrical output, haptic feedback to the driver, bus systems, microcomputers, power electronics, and electrical actuators. For their design safety, integrity methods such as reliability, fault tree and hazard analysis, and risk classification are required. Different fault-tolerance principles with various forms of redundancy are considered, resulting in fail-operational, fail-silent, and fail-safe systems. Fault-detection methods are discussed for use in low-cost components, followed by a review of principles for fault-tolerant design of sensors, actuators, and communication. We evaluate these methods and principles and show how they can be applied to low-cost automotive components and drive-by-wire systems. A brake-by-wire system with electronic pedal and electric brakes is then considered in more detail, showing the design of the components and the overall architecture. Finally, we present conclusions and an outlook for further development of drive-by-wire systems.

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Citations
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Dissertation

A resilient redundant routing framework for future internet architecture

Hristo Asenov
TL;DR: This dissertation proposes and implements a new distributed architecture for next generation core routers by implementing N-Modular Redundancy for Control Plane Processes and uses a distributed key-value data store as a substrate for High Availability (HA) operation and synchronization with different consistency requirements.
Proceedings Article

Self-repairing control via an unstable filter

TL;DR: In this article, a self-repairing control system (SRCS) for nonlinear plants with unknown sensor failures of a stuck-type is presented, which can detect the failure and replace the faulty sensor with the healthy one.
Journal ArticleDOI

Synergistic Redundancy: Towards Verifiable Safety for Autonomous Vehicles

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors propose a safety architecture for complex cyber physical systems, like autonomous vehicles, which provides verifiable safety guarantees against specific faults by decoupling the mission and safety tasks of the system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Human-centred design of next generation transportation infrastructure with connected and automated vehicles: a system-of-systems perspective

TL;DR: In this article , a human-centred approach that integrates the behaviors of human drivers and CAVs with the design and enhancement of transportation infrastructure is proposed. But the authors do not consider the role of infrastructure in CAV and human-driven vehicles interactions and focus on how they perceive and predict actions of each other.
Book ChapterDOI

Drive by Wire Systems: Impact on Vehicle Safety and Performance

TL;DR: A broadened definition of drive by wire systems will include other microprocessor based automotive control systems such as anti-lock braking system (ABS), traction control system (TCS), yaw stability control (YSC), etc.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Fault-Tolerant Control: The 1997 Situation

TL;DR: The state of the art is outlined in a field which remains largely a theoretical topic with most application studies based upon aerospace systems and a basic literature review covering most areas of fault-tolerant control is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fault-tolerant control systems — A holistic view

TL;DR: Fault-tolerant control is used in systems that need to be able to detect faults and prevent simple faults related to control loops from developing into production stoppages or failures at a plant level as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

The self-validating sensor: rationale, definitions and examples

TL;DR: In this article, a self-validating sensor model is proposed which performs self-diagnostics and generates a variety of data types, including the on-line uncertainty of each measurement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Autonomous control reconfiguration

TL;DR: In this article, two specific approaches are presented for autonomous control reconfiguration, particularly as it relates to fault accommodation and learning systems, to illustrate the types of difficulties encountered and to serve as a focus.
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