This paper presents the design of an ecological adaptive cruise controller (ECO-ACC) for a plug-in hybrid vehicle (PHEV) which exploits automated driving and connectivity. Most existing papers for ECO-ACC focus on a shortsighted control scheme. A two-level control framework for long-sighted ECO-ACC was only recently introduced [1]. However, that work is based on a deterministic traffic signal phase and timing (SPaT) over the entire route. In practice, connectivity with traffic lights may be limited by communication range, e.g. just one upcoming traffic light. We propose a two-level receding-horizon control framework for long-sighted ECO-ACC that exploits deterministic SPaT for the upcoming traffic light, and utilizes historical SPaT for other traffic lights within a receding control horizon. We also incorporate a powertrain control mechanism to enhance PHEV energy prediction accuracy. Hardware-in-the-loop simulation results validate the energy savings of the receding-horizon control framework in various traffic scenarios.
Abstract:
Publication date:
December 1, 2019
Publication type:
Conference Paper
Citation:
Bae, S., Choi, Y., Kim, Y., Guanetti, J., Borrelli, F., & Moura, S. (2019). Real-time Ecological Velocity Planning for Plug-in Hybrid Vehicles with Partial Communication to Traffic Lights. 2019 IEEE 58th Conference on Decision and Control (CDC), 1279–1285. https://doi.org/10.1109/CDC40024.2019.9030166