Long Combination Vehicles Reverse Strategies Based on Articulation Angle Gradient
Paper in proceeding, 2024

To guide the development of driver assistant systems and fully automated solutions for reversing long combination vehicles (LCVs), the principles for reversing LCVs are investigated using the articulation angle gradient. The widely used Steady-state Circling Limitation (SSCL) in reversing LCVs has two main drawbacks: it restricts vehicles from operating with large articulation angles crucial for tight spaces and lacks a well-defined feasible range. Two new reverse principles are introduced that can provide better insight. The first principle extends SSCL to include more extreme articulation angles for single-articulated vehicles. It also addresses the necessity of considering articulation gradients when developing the continuous reverse limitation for multi-articulated vehicles. The second principle introduces limited distance reversing for vehicles that no longer meet the first principle's requirements, providing additional vehicle ending poses useful for tasks like loading and coupling.

Combination Vehicle

Articulation Angle Gradient

Reverse

Kinematic Model

Author

Zhaohui Ge

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Vehicle Engineering and Autonomous Systems

Fredrik Bruzelius

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Vehicle Engineering and Autonomous Systems

Bengt J H Jacobson

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Vehicle Engineering and Autonomous Systems

Proceedings of the 16th International Symposium on Advanced Vehicle Control

16th International Symposium on Advanced Vehicle Control, AVEC 24
Milan, Italy,

AUTOFREIGHT 2 - Efficient Transport Systems for Regional Container Transports

Volvo Group, 2022-04-01 -- 2025-02-13.

VINNOVA (2021-05027), 2022-04-01 -- 2025-02-13.

Areas of Advance

Transport

Infrastructure

ReVeRe (Research Vehicle Resource)

Subject Categories

Vehicle Engineering

More information

Created

6/28/2024