Affiliation:
1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA
2. California PATH Program, University of California, Berkeley, California, USA
Abstract
This paper presents an on-board road condition monitoring system. The road condition is continuously evaluated in terms of slipperiness and coarseness and is classified into four grades, normal (μmax ≤ 0.5), slippery (0.3 ≤ μmax< 0.5), very slippery (μmax< 0.3), and rough surface (gravel). A non-linear curve fitting technique is adopted to estimate the maximum tyre-road friction coefficient using the so-called ‘magic formula’. The characteristic of the relationship between friction coefficient and slip, i.e. the value of maximum friction coefficient μmax varies significantly with different surfaces, but its corresponding slip value λmax does not vary much, is exploited in the road condition classification algorithm. For surface coarseness analysis, a separate classifier based on the variance of filtered wheel speed signal is implemented. Experimental results demonstrate the feasibility of the road condition monitoring system for detecting slippery and rough road surfaces in close to real-time. In addition, the proposed slip-based friction estimation algorithm has the merits of robustness to vehicle-tyre variance and easy calibration as opposed to past slip-based friction estimation approaches in the literature.
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Condensed Matter Physics
Cited by
40 articles.
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