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Journal Article

Citation

Certosini C, Vinattieri F, Capitani R, Annicchiarico C. Proc. Inst. Mech. Eng. Pt. D J. Automobile Eng. 2019; 233(11): 2701-2713.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0954407018804389

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Driving simulators have boosted the vehicle design with the introduction of human beings in the simulation loop. For a realistic functioning, the steering system must provide an accurate behaviour, since the hand wheel is a crucial human interface. Despite a large diffusion of steering models, this paper deals with the creation of a specific solution for real-time applications, characterized by precise features as numerical stability and low computational cost. The proposed model is based on a physical structure and considers all the key phenomena, such as the system elasticities, the power steering effects and friction hysteresis, making the model more accurate in terms of steering wheel torque and lateral acceleration than other angle-driven models. Its two degrees of freedom design allows a proper behaviour of the power steering sub-model; another key aspect is the friction model: the use of the LuGre formulation greatly improves accuracy and stability in comparison to the lookup table friction models. Compared to the literature reference torque-driven model, it does not need the use of a torque sensor when implemented in driving simulators having an angle-driven formulation (the input of the steering wheel is its angle and the torque needed is its output), hence it is cheaper to implement; nevertheless, its accuracy is close to state-of-art reference. An original parametrization procedure is proposed since a generalized one is not available in literature; using a steering test-rig, all the model variables are defined. The validation phase combines offline and online simulations, assessing objectively and subjectively the model's capabilities and showing accurate results in terms of steering wheel torque, lateral acceleration and steering feeling. In addition, a minor contribution of this paper shows how different analyses (steering effort evaluation, experimental data comparison or simulator feedback computation) require different output torques.


Language: en

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