Flexible Eco-cruising Strategy for Connected and Automated Vehicles with Efficient Driving Lane Planning and Speed Optimization
Journal article, 2024

Eco-cruising control of vehicles is a potential approach for improving vehicle energy efficiency and reducing travel time. However, many eco-cruising studies merely focused on vehicle longitudinal speed optimization but overlooked the lane change maneuvers, which may impair the benefits of eco-cruising when the vehicle encounters the slowly moving preceding vehicle. This study proposes a flexible eco-cruising strategy (FECS) with efficient driving lane planning and speed optimization capabilities simultaneously for connected and automated vehicles. The FECS is designed with a hierarchical control framework, where the first layer uses the Dijkstra algorithm to plan an efficient driving lane sequence considering the long-term effect of the preceding vehicles, then guides the second layer to optimize the vehicle’s speed for saving energy using trigonometric speed profile. The optimized driving trajectory is implemented in the third layer by regulating the speed and yaw angle for guaranteeing safe inter-vehicle distance when uncertainties are present. Finally, stochastic simulation with randomized traffic flows and typical case analysis based on real-world traffic data are conducted to demonstrate the performance of the FECS. The results manifest FECS’s capability of lowering driving costs in moderate-flow and free-flow traffic. However, we note that the benefits are less pronounced in congested-flow traffic.

electric vehicles

eco-driving

speed optimization

connected and automated vehicles

driving lane planning

Author

Haoxuan Dong

National University of Singapore (NUS)

Qun Wang

Nanjing University of Science and Technology

Weichao Zhuang

Southeast University

Guodong Yin

Southeast University

Kun Gao

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Geology and Geotechnics

Zhaojian Li

Michigan State University

Ziyou Song

National University of Singapore (NUS)

IEEE Transactions on Transportation Electrification

2332-7782 (eISSN)

Vol. 10 1 1530-1540

Subject Categories

Vehicle Engineering

DOI

10.1109/TTE.2023.3289980

More information

Latest update

4/4/2024 7