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Publicações

Publicações por CPES

2014

Influence of Li-ion Battery Models in the Sizing of Hybrid Storage Systems with Supercapacitors

Autores
Pinto, C; Barreras, JV; de Castro, R; Schaltz, E; Andreasen, SJ; Araujo, RE;

Publicação
2014 IEEE VEHICLE POWER AND PROPULSION CONFERENCE (VPPC)

Abstract
This paper presents a comparative study of the influence of different aggregated electrical circuit battery models in the sizing process of a hybrid energy storage system (ESS), composed by Li-ion batteries and supercapacitors (SCs). The aim is to find the number of cells required to propel a certain vehicle over a predefined driving cycle. During this process, three battery models will be considered. The first consists in a linear static zeroeth order battery model over a restricted operating window. The second is a non-linear static model, while the third takes into account first-order dynamics of the battery. Simulation results demonstrate that the adoption of a more accurate battery model in the sizing of hybrid ESSs prevents over-sizing, leading to a reduction in the number of cells of up to 29%, and a cost decrease of up to 10%.

2014

Assisted Assignment of Automotive Safety Requirements

Autores
Azevedo, LD; Parker, D; Walker, M; Papadopoulos, Y; Araujo, RE;

Publicação
IEEE SOFTWARE

Abstract
ISO 26262, a functional-safety standard, uses Automotive Safety Integrity Levels (ASILs) to assign safety requirements to automotive-system elements. System designers initially assign ASILs to system-level hazards and then allocate them to elements of the refined system architecture. Through ASIL decomposition, designers can divide a function’s safety requirements among multiple components. However, in practice, manual ASIL decomposition is difficult and produces varying results. To overcome this problem, a new tool automates ASIL allocation and decomposition. It supports the system and software engineering life cycle by enabling users to efficiently allocate safety requirements regarding systematic failures in the design of critical embedded computer systems. The tool is applicable to industries with a similar concept of safety integrity levels. © 1984-2012 IEEE.

2014

Adaptive-robust friction compensation in a hybrid brake-by-wire actuator

Autores
de Castro, R; Todeschini, F; Araujo, RE; Savaresi, SM; Corno, M; Freitas, D;

Publicação
PROCEEDINGS OF THE INSTITUTION OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS PART I-JOURNAL OF SYSTEMS AND CONTROL ENGINEERING

Abstract
This work focuses on the development of a pressure-loop controller for a hybrid brake-by-wire system, composed of a hydraulic link and an electro-mechanical actuator. Towards this goal, we will start by constructing a reduced model that is capable of capturing the fundamental dynamics of the actuator, which is particularly useful for control design purposes. Motivated by the large friction disturbances that affect the system, we also investigate linear-in-the-parameter models suitable for (online) model-based friction compensation. More specifically, results from the theory of function approximation, together with optimization techniques, are explored to approximate the Stribeck friction model through a linear-in-the-parameter model. This new linear-in-the-parameter model is then employed in the design of a control law for tracking the braking pressure of the hybrid brake-by-wire. The main features of this controller are the robustness to parametric uncertainties, thanks to the inclusion of a switching-sigma adaptive mechanism, and the attenuation of non-parametric disturbances with a continuous sliding mode action. The stability and robustness properties of the closed-loop system are investigated with the help of the Lyapunov method. Finally, experimental tests demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach and its ability to handle disturbances.

2014

Design of safety-oriented control allocation strategies for overactuated electric vehicles

Autores
de Castro, R; Tanelli, M; Araujo, RE; Savaresi, SM;

Publicação
VEHICLE SYSTEM DYNAMICS

Abstract
The new vehicle platforms for electric vehicles (ENTs) that are becoming available are characterised by actuator redundancy, which makes it possible to jointly optimise different aspects of the vehicle motion. To do this, high-level control objectives are first specified and solved with appropriate control r strategies. Then, the resulting virtual control action must be translated into actual actuator commands by a control allocation layer that takes care of computing the forces to be applied at the wheels. This step, in general, is quite demanding as for as computational complexity is considered. In this work, a safety-oriented approach to this problem is proposed. Specifically, a four-wheel steer EV with four in-wheel motors is considered, and the high-level motion controller is designed within a sliding mode framework with conditional integrators. For distributing the forces among the tyres, two control allocation approaches are investigated. The first, based on the extension of the cascading generalised inverse method, is computationally efficient but shows some limitations in dealing with unfeasible force values. To solve the problem, a second allocation algorithm is proposed, which relies on the linearisation of the tyre road friction constraints. Extensive tests, carried out in the CarSim simulation environment, demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed approach.

2014

Design Considerations on Feed-forward and Kalman Tracking Filters in Grid-Tied-Inverters Current-Control

Autores
Ramos, JC; Araujo, RE;

Publicação
2014 IEEE 23RD INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS (ISIE)

Abstract
It is demonstrated that in grid-tied-inverter control, resonant integrators can be moved from the current loop to the input voltage filter allowing for better accuracy of voltage rms and frequency measurements whithout compromising controlability. Design of the input filter is discussed to ensure good performance and phase compensation and a robust feed-forward is built upon this filter that, together with the elimination of output distortion, results in a fair open-loop control response. By closing the loop with a PI controller and by turning off supposedly non-conducting IGBTs, a current transient results that competes with state-of-the-art control strategies and is only limited by output filter inductance while allowing for a fast and accurate estimator of grid parameters such as voltage rms and frequency, essential for fast droop control.

2014

Minimum-time manoeuvring in electric vehicles with four wheel-individual-motors

Autores
de Castro, R; Tanelli, M; Araujo, RE; Savaresi, SM;

Publicação
VEHICLE SYSTEM DYNAMICS

Abstract
The coordinated control of vehicle actuators is gaining more and more importance as new platforms are becoming available, with chassis endowed with many different actuators that may help controlling the vehicle motion. Furthermore, wheel individual motors allow using a single system to apply both positive and negative torques at the wheels, which can be actuated independently one from the other. In electric vehicles (EVs), moreover, such a freedom in the actuation mechanisms opens the way to the combined optimisation of performance and energy consumption issues. In this paper, the problem of minimum-time manoeuvring in EVs is addressed, and the proposed strategy is compared against a benchmark, a-causal optimal solution showing that only a negligible loss of performance is experienced.

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