1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to a system for providing vehicle/trailer offtracking control and, more particularly, to a system for providing low speed vehicle/trailer offtracking control that includes determining a desired hitch angle between the trailer and the vehicle and a variable time delay between the vehicle front wheels and the trailers rear wheels to provide hitch angle feedback and closed-loop rear-wheel steering control.
2. Discussion of the Related Art
It is known in the art to employ active rear-wheel vehicle steering based on vehicle dynamic information during a vehicle turn, or yaw. Active rear-wheel steering control can improve vehicle stability over a conventional vehicle having only two steerable front wheels. The rear-wheel steering control can be in-phase steering or out-of-phase steering. In-phase rear-wheel steering steers the rear wheels in the same direction as the front wheels, and is typically provided at higher vehicle speeds. Out-of-phase rear-wheel steering steers the rear wheels in an opposite direction to the front wheels to provide a tighter turning radius, and is typically provided at lower vehicle speeds.
Open-loop (feed-forward) rear-wheel steering control provides a predetermined amount of rear-wheel steering control depending on the amount of hand-wheel steering provided by the vehicle operator and the vehicle speed. It is known to also provide closed-loop feedback rear-wheel steering based on certain feedback signals in the event that the vehicle is not following what is requested by the vehicle operator. Closed-loop rear-wheel steering assist systems sense the actual vehicle yaw rate and the intended yaw rate, and generate an error signal that provides the steering control by the rear wheels if the actual vehicle yaw rate and the intended vehicle yaw rate are not the same.
It is well known that when a vehicle travels around a corner, the rear wheels of the vehicle follow a different path than the front wheels of the vehicle. This phenomenon is known in the art as offtracking. Offtracking is more of a problem for a vehicle pulling a trailer where the trailer wheels do not follow the same path as the wheels of the towing vehicle. Typically at low vehicle speeds, for example speeds under 40 kph, the trailer wheels follow a path closer to the inside curve of the turn. For longer trailers, the offtracking is more serious. Offtracking sometimes requires that the vehicle operator make a wider turn than is desired to prevent the trailer wheels from colliding with curbs or other obstacles, especially when the vehicle and trailer are heavily loaded.
In accordance with the teachings of the present invention, an offtracking control system for a vehicle/trailer combination is disclosed that properly steers the rear wheels of the vehicle to control the hitch angle between the vehicle and the trailer to prevent trailer offtracking. The control system uses a vehicle speed sensor, a vehicle yaw rate sensor, a hand-wheel angle sensor and a hitch angle sensor. The control system generates a desired hitch angle and a travel time delay between the front wheels of the vehicle and the rear wheels of the trailer from the sensor signals. A delay unit generates a hitch angle command from the desired hitch angle and the time delay. The hitch angle command is subtracted from the sensed hitch angle to generate a hitch angle error signal. The hitch angle error signal is sent to a feedback controller that generates a closed-loop rear-wheel steering signal. The closed-loop rear-wheel steering signal is added to an open-loop rear-wheel steering signal to generate a rear-wheel steering command signal that prevents trailer offtracking.
Additional advantages and features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description and appended claims, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The following discussion of the embodiments of the invention directed to active rear-wheel steering control for a vehicle/trailer combination to prevent or reduce trailer offtracking is merely exemplary in nature, and is in no way intended to limit the invention or its applications or uses.
As will be discussed in detail below, the controller 16 provides a rear-wheel steering command to prevent trailer offtracking during a turn. The steering command is a combination of an open-loop steering command and a closed-loop steering command. The open-loop steering command is provided by a look-up table based on the speed of the vehicle and the hand-wheel angle or front wheel steering angle, as is well understood in the art. The open-loop steering command table will be different depending on whether the vehicle 12 is towing the trailer 14 or not. The closed-loop steering command is determined by the yaw rate of the vehicle 12, the speed of the vehicle 12, the hand-wheel angle and the hitch angle between the vehicle 12 and the trailer 14. Suitable sensors (not shown) can be used to determine if the trailer 14 is attached to the vehicle 12 so that the closed-loop steering control to prevent offtracking is engaged. Alternately, the vehicle operator can turn a switch (not shown) to engage and disengage the closed-loop steering control. Also, the closed-loop steering control can be determined differently for stability purposes when the trailer 14 is not attached to the vehicle 12.
To calculate the closed-loop steering control referred to above, the vehicle/trailer combination 10 is modeled as a tricycle model 60 as shown in
To prevent the trailer offtracking the present invention proposes maintaining the rear wheels 46 and 48 of the trailer 14 at the same turning radius R as the front wheels 42 and 44 of the vehicle 12 over Δt seconds when negotiating a tight turn at low speeds. In other words, the control system uses the rear-wheel steering to adjust the hitch angle between the vehicle 12 and the trailer 14 during the time it takes the rear wheels of the trailer 14 to reach a previous position of the front wheels of the vehicle 12 during a turn.
The desired hitch angle θcmd(t) required to maintain the turning radius R with the time delay Δτ(t) between the front wheels 42 and 44 of the vehicle 12 and the rear wheels 46 and 48 of the trailer 14 are determined as follows in one embodiment. The vehicle turning radius R with four-wheel steering can be calculated as:
Where a1 is the distance from the vehicle's front axle to its center of gravity, b1 is the distance from the center of gravity to the vehicle's rear axle, δf and δr are the front and rear wheel angles, respectively.
The total velocity at the hitch 30 is:
From triangulation:
Thus, the desired hitch angle θcmd(t) can be calculated as:
To approximate the variable time delay Δτ between the vehicle's front wheels 42 and 44 and the trailer's rear wheels 46 and 48, the equivalent trailer travel distance deq can be calculated as:
Where l1=a1+c and l2=a2+b2.
The equivalent trailer traveling speed ueq at the rear wheels 46 and 48 of the trailer 14 is approximated as:
The desired hitch angle signal θcmd(t) and the time delay signal Δτ are sent to a delay unit 78 that generates a hitch angle command signal θcmd(t−Δτ). The hitch angle command signal θcmd(t−Δτ) can be determined by a transport delay as:
θcmd(t)=
The hitch angle command signal θcmd(t−Δτ) is subtracted from the measured hitch angle θ(t) received from the sensor 32 in a differencer 80 to generate a hitch angle error signal. The hitch angle error signal is sent to a feedback controller 82, for example a proportional-integral-derivative (PID) controller, that generates a closed-loop rear-wheel steering (RWS) command signal δr
Δθ(t)=θcmd(t)−θ(t) (8)
The RWS closed-loop command signal is determined as:
Where Kp, Ki and Kd are the proportional, integral and derivative gains, respectively.
The closed-loop rear-wheel steering command signal δr
The closed-loop offtracking control only works when the RWS open-loop control gain is negative, i.e., the rear-wheel steering angle command is out-of-phase with the front wheel angle.
The algorithm then determines whether the vehicle speed signal u(t) is less than a predetermined vehicle speed value û where no offtracking control is needed or used at decision diamond 96. The speed value û can be set at a crossover speed where the rear-front steering ratio of the RSW opened-loop control changes sign from in-phase steering to out-of-phase steering, such as 40 kph. If the vehicle speed signal u(t) is greater than or equal to the predetermined speed value û, then no offtracking control is necessary and the closed-loop rear-wheel steering command δr-cl(t) is set to zero at box 98.
If the vehicle speed signal u(t) is less than the predetermined speed value û, then the algorithm computes the desired hitch angle
θcmd(t)=
The hitch angle command θcmd(tn) is then subtracted from the measured hitch angle θ(t) at box 108 to generate a hitch angle error as:
Δθ(t)=θcmd(t)−θ(t) (13)
The algorithm then determines the corresponding RWS closed-loop offtracking control command from equation (9) by the feedback controller 82 at box 110. The total RWS control command δr
The foregoing discussion discloses and describes merely exemplary embodiments of the present invention. One skilled in the art will readily recognize from such discussion and from the accompanying drawings and claims that various changes, modifications and variations can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.