This invention pertains generally to vehicle control systems, and more specifically to assisting a parking operation.
Vehicle parking presents challenges for vehicle operators, stemming from issues related to vehicle size and physical dimensions of the vehicle and a targeted parking space, operator skill, area in which the operator wants to place the vehicle, and the type of parking maneuver contemplated.
A parking assistance system includes identifying a desired parking location, and assisting the operator in placing the vehicle in the desired location by controlling aspects of vehicle operation. Such a system is now described.
In accordance with an embodiment of the invention, there is provided a method to assist steering of a vehicle equipped with an active steering system when operating in a reverse direction. The method comprises monitoring vehicle operating characteristics and an operator steering input. Boundaries of a target region and a reference point are determined. A target steering angle range is calculated based upon the reference point and the target location. A controlled steering angle of the active steering system is corrected when the operator steering input is outside the target steering angle range. An aspect of the invention included determining the reference point comprising a point of intersection of a first vector and a second vector, the first vector parallel to and passing through a centerline of a rear axle of the vehicle and the second vector perpendicular to and passing through a centerline of an inside front steerable wheel of the vehicle.
These and other aspects of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art upon reading and understanding the following detailed description of the embodiments.
The invention may take physical form in certain parts and arrangement of parts, the embodiments of which are described in detail and illustrated in the accompanying drawings which form a part hereof, and wherein:
Referring now to the drawings, wherein the showings are for the purpose of illustrating the invention only and not for the purpose of limiting the same,
Referring now to
In operation, the parking control scheme detects an operator intent to park the vehicle using either a parallel parking maneuver or a rear parking maneuver (‘Parking Command’). Detection of the operator intent to park can be through an interactive notification system, e.g., a parking switch, wherein the operator notifies the control module of an intent to park using a user interface in the passenger compartment. Alternatively, the control system may detect an intent to park through a passive system, wherein the control module detects an intent to park by vehicle operation, e.g., a vehicle-stopping maneuver followed by a shift into a reverse transmission gear. Data accumulated by the parking assist sensors are processed through the first control module 32 to determine boundaries of the target parking region 80, and desired range of steering angle command is generated based thereon. The vehicle operator executes a parking maneuver, and when the steering wheel angle used by the operator is effective to place the vehicle within the allowable parking space geometry, there is no steering correction. When the operator input to steering angle falls outside the boundary, or the vehicle is projected to move out of the desired region based upon a vehicle trajectory, the parking control module 36 controls the AFS system 40 to adjust vehicle steering angle to place the vehicle within the boundaries of the target parking region 80, such steering angle correction preferably being limited and relatively non-intrusive. Furthermore, the first control module is continually monitoring and updating the boundaries of the target parking region 80. Therefore, if a new object is detected during the parking maneuver, the parking control system can respond to and accommodate it.
Referring now to
The control scheme described in
The reference point C, having orthogonal position (Cx, Cy) relative to the O point, is derived as follows. Vectors VRW (rear wheel) and VFW (front wheel) are determined. Vector VRW comprises a vector extending parallel to the rear axle and passing through the centerline thereof. Vector VFW comprises a vector extending perpendicular to the inside front (steering) wheel, and passing through the centerline thereof. Reference point C is defined and determinable as the intersection of vectors VRW and VFW, in this embodiment. Alternatively, the vector VFW can comprise a vector generated based upon both the inside front wheel and the outside front steering wheel. The reference point C can be determined regularly during ongoing operation of the system described.
The system determines four radii, each relative to the reference point C, comprising:
Rir: vehicle permissible inside turning radius directed to the rear, inside point of a vehicle body;
Ror: vehicle permissible outside turning radius directed to the rear, outside point of a vehicle body;
Ri: vehicle radius from a nearest vehicle point to reference point C, typically defined along vector VRW; and,
Rof: vehicle radius from a furthest vehicle point to reference point C directed to the front, outside point of a vehicle body.
The radii Rir, Ror, Ri, and Rof are determinable for any vehicle location, steering angle, δf, and location O, using Eqs. 1-4:
Ri=L/tan(δf) [1]
Rir=sqrt[(L/tan(δf))2+Lr2] [2]
Ror=sqrt[(L/tan(δf))+T)2+Lr2], and [3]
Rof=sqrt[(L/tan(δf))+T)2+(L+Lf)2]. [4]
The radii Ri and Ror are known to have the following limits, described in Eqs. 5 and 6:
Ri>sqrt(Cx2+Cy2), and, [5]
Ror<(Cx−Px). [6]
Limits for steering angle, δf, i.e., δfmin(t), δfmax(t), are determined to be as described in Eqs. 7 and 8:
tan−1 [L/sqrt((Cx−Px)2−Lr2)−T)]=δfmin(t)<δf(t) [7]
tan−1 [L/sqrt(Cx2+Cy2)]=δfmax(t)>δf(t). [8]
Thus, as depicted in
Referring now to
Referring again to
When there is detected a change from the first direction of steering wheel angle to the second direction δf2(t) of steering wheel angle (Step 224), data are gathered from sensors and vehicle position is computed. Minimum and maximum allowable second steering angles δfmin2(t), δfmax2(t) are computed (Step 226). So long as the operator controls the steering wheel within the maximum and minimum allowable steering angles in the direction of steering, there is no steering correction. When the operator commands the steering wheel outside either the maximum or minimum allowable steering wheel angles (Step 228), a second steering angle correction, Δδf2(t) is determined (Step 230) and an AFS angle control command is generated (Step 232), both originating from reference point C2. This operation continues so long as there is an intent to park and the vehicle remains in reverse gear (Step 234).
The control scheme described in
Ri2=L/tan(δf2); [9]
Rof2=sqrt[(L/tan(δf2)+T)2+(L+Lf)2]; [10]
Ri1=L/tan(δf1); and, [11]
Ror1=sqrt[(L/tan(δf)+T)2+Lr2]. [12]
The radii Ri2 and Rof2 are known to have the following limits, described in Eqs. 13 and 14:
Rof2<sqrt(Cx22+Cy22), and, [13]
Ri2<Cy2. [14]
Limits for steering angle, δf2, i.e., δfmin2(t), δfmax2(t), are determined as described in Eqs. 15 and 16:
tan−1 [2LT/((Px+LT)2−T2−(L+Lf)2)]=δfmin2(t)<δf2(t) [15]
tan−1 [L/Cy2]=δfmax2(t)>δf2(t). [16]
The limits on steering angle, δf2 are translated to the limits on steering angle, δf1 using Eq. 17:
Rif1+Rif2+T=sqrt[(Cx1−Cx2T)2+(Cy1−Cy2)2] [17]
The additional limits for steering angle, δf1 are determined using Eqs. 7 and 8. Limits for steering angle, δf1 are the limits satisfying all the conditions listed above. After the steering angle transition stage, limits on steering angle, δf2 are only based on Eqs. 15 and 16.
Furthermore, the first control module is continually monitoring and updating the allowable parking space geometry. Therefore, if a new object is detected during the parking maneuver, the control system accommodates it.
The first and second reference points C1 and C2, are defined to have orthogonal positions (Cx1, Cy1) and (Cx2, Cy2) relative to the O point. The reference point is derived as previously described from the radii Rir, Ror, Ri, Rof, and determinable for any vehicle location, steering wheel angle, δf, location O and the respective reference point C1 or C2. The reference point is determined regularly during ongoing operation of the system described, as previously described using Eqs. 1-17.
Thus, as depicted in
Referring now to
The invention has been described with specific reference to the embodiments and modifications thereto. Further modifications and alterations may occur to others upon reading and understanding the specification. It is intended to include all such modifications and alterations insofar as they come within the scope of the invention.
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