Air-management and fueling strategy for diesel engines from multi-layer control perspective
Paper in proceeding, 2019

This paper proposes a novel control design procedure for air management and fueling strategy (AMFS) of diesel engines in lights of a multi-layer control structure (MLCS). Furthermore, novel sufficient stability conditions in the form of linear matrix inequalities are derived (using slack variables to reduce the conservativeness) for grid-based linear parameter-varying systems. The gain-scheduled controller for AMFS is designed to track a reference torque
trajectory requested by higher control layers from MLCS, with the objective of minimizing diesel consumption and pollutants' emissions. For controller design a reduced order grid-based linear parameter-varying model is obtained from the detailed benchmark model published by Eriksson et al. (2016). The controller is validated on the benchmark model using the road profile Söderälje-Norrköping.

Multi-layer control

robust control

linear parameter-varyingsystems

optimal control

diesel engine

air-path system

Author

Adrian Ilka

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Systems and control

Nikolce Murgovski

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Systems and control

Jonas Fredriksson

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Systems and control

Jonas Sjöberg

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Systems and control

IFAC-PapersOnLine

24058963 (eISSN)

Vol. 52 5 335-340

9th IFAC International Symposium on Advances in Automotive Control
Orléans, France,

IMPERIUM - Implementation of powertrain control for economic and clean real driving emission and fuel consumption

European Commission (EC) (EC/H2020/713783), 2016-09-01 -- 2019-08-31.

Multi-CORE - Multi-level COntrol for Robust integrated vehicle Energy management

Swedish Energy Agency (P43322-1), 2016-12-01 -- 2019-12-31.

Subject Categories

Aerospace Engineering

Vehicle Engineering

Control Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.ifacol.2019.09.054

More information

Latest update

3/2/2022 2