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Platoon

About: Platoon is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2962 publications have been published within this topic receiving 46965 citations. The topic is also known as: military platoon.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The design, development, implementation, and testing of a CACC system, which consists of two controllers, one to manage the approaching maneuver to the leading vehicle and the other to regulate car-following once the vehicle joins the platoon, is presented.
Abstract: Intelligent vehicle cooperation based on reliable communication systems contributes not only to reducing traffic accidents but also to improving traffic flow. Adaptive cruise control (ACC) systems can gain enhanced performance by adding vehicle-vehicle wireless communication to provide additional information to augment range sensor data, leading to cooperative ACC (CACC). This paper presents the design, development, implementation, and testing of a CACC system. It consists of two controllers, one to manage the approaching maneuver to the leading vehicle and the other to regulate car-following once the vehicle joins the platoon. The system has been implemented on four production Infiniti M56s vehicles, and this paper details the results of experiments to validate the performance of the controller and its improvements with respect to the commercially available ACC system.

877 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Simulation results show that the proposed methodology provides a reliable tool for a systematic and efficient design of platoon controllers within IVHS.
Abstract: A methodology is proposed for longitudinal control design of platoons of automotive vehicles within intelligent vehicle/highway systems (IVHSs). The proposed decentralized overlapping control law is obtained by using the inclusion principle, i.e., by decomposing the original system model by an appropriate input/state expansion, and by applying the linear quadratic (LQ) optimization to the locally extracted subsystems. The local quadratic criteria directly reflect the desired system performance. Optimization is carried out by using a sequential algorithm adapted to the lower block triangular (LBT) structure of the closed-loop system model. Contraction to the original space provides a decentralized platoon controller which preserves the asymptotic stability and the steady-state behavior of the controller obtained in the expanded space. Conditions for eliminating the "slinky effect" and obtaining the strict string stability are defined; it is shown that the corresponding constraints on the controller parameters are not too restrictive. A new dynamic platoon controller structure, consisting of a reduced order observer and a static feedback map, is obtained by applying the inclusion principle to the decentralized overlapping platoon control design in the case when the information from the preceding vehicle is missing. Numerous simulation results show that the proposed methodology provides a reliable tool for a systematic and efficient design of platoon controllers within IVHS.

588 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Under linear feedback controllers, a unified internal stability theorem is proved by using the algebraic graph theory and Routh-Hurwitz stability criterion, and the stabilizing thresholds of linear controller gains for platoons are established under a large class of different information flow topologies.
Abstract: In addition to decentralized controllers, the information flow among vehicles can significantly affect the dynamics of a platoon. This paper studies the influence of information flow topology on the internal stability and scalability of homogeneous vehicular platoons moving in a rigid formation. A linearized vehicle longitudinal dynamic model is derived using the exact feedback linearization technique, which accommodates the inertial delay of powertrain dynamics. Directed graphs are adopted to describe different types of allowable information flow interconnecting vehicles, including both radar-based sensors and vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) communications. Under linear feedback controllers, a unified internal stability theorem is proved by using the algebraic graph theory and Routh–Hurwitz stability criterion. The theorem explicitly establishes the stabilizing thresholds of linear controller gains for platoons, under a large class of different information flow topologies. Using matrix eigenvalue analysis, the scalability is investigated for platoons under two typical information flow topologies, i.e., 1) the stability margin of platoon decays to zero as $0(\mbox{1}/N^{2})$ for bidirectional topology; and 2) the stability margin is always bounded and independent of the platoon size for bidirectional-leader topology. Numerical simulations are used to illustrate the results.

541 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The fundamental issues in a platoon-based VCPS are discussed, including vehicle platooning/clustering, cooperative adaptive cruise control, platoon- based vehicular communications, etc., all of which are characterized by the tightly coupled relationship between traffic dynamics and VANET behaviors.
Abstract: Vehicles on the road with some common interests can cooperatively form a platoon-based driving pattern, in which a vehicle follows another vehicle and maintains a small and nearly constant distance to the preceding vehicle. It has been proved that, compared with driving individually, such a platoon-based driving pattern can significantly improve road capacity and energy efficiency. Moreover, with the emerging vehicular ad hoc network (VANET), the performance of a platoon in terms of road capacity, safety, energy efficiency, etc., can be further improved. On the other hand, the physical dynamics of vehicles inside the platoon can also affect the performance of a VANET. Such a complex system can be considered a platoon-based vehicular cyber-physical system (VCPS), which has attracted significant attention recently. In this paper, we present a comprehensive survey on a platoon-based VCPS. We first review the related work of a platoon-based VCPS. We then introduce two elementary techniques involved in a platoon-based VCPS, i.e., the vehicular networking architecture and standards, and traffic dynamics, respectively. We further discuss the fundamental issues in a platoon-based VCPS, including vehicle platooning/clustering, cooperative adaptive cruise control, platoon-based vehicular communications, etc., all of which are characterized by the tightly coupled relationship between traffic dynamics and VANET behaviors. Since system verification is critical to VCPS development, we also give an overview of VCPS simulation tools. Finally, we share our view on some open issues that may lead to new research directions.

539 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated two different longitudinal control policies for automatically controlled vehicles, one is based on maintaining a constant spacing between the vehicles while the other is based upon maintaining the constant headway (or time) between successive vehicles.
Abstract: SUMMARY This paper investigates two different longitudinal control policies for automatically controlled vehicles. One is based on maintaining a constant spacing between the vehicles while the other is based upon maintaining a constant headway (or time) between successive vehicles. To avoid collisions in the platoon, controllers have to be designed to ensure string stability, i.e the spacing errors should not get amplified as they propagate upstream from vehicle to vehicle. A measure of string stability is introduced and a systematic method of designing constant spacing controllers which guarantee string stability is presented. The constant headway policy does not require inter-vehicle communication to assure string stablity. Also, since inter-vehicle communication is not required it can be used in systems with mixed automated-nonautomated vehicles, e.g for AICC (Autonomous Intelligent Cruise Control). It is shown in this paper that for all the autonomous headway control laws, the desired control torques ...

537 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023320
2022625
2021318
2020384
2019330
2018265