Safety-oriented automated vehicle longitudinal control considering both stability and damping behavior

This study aims to demonstrate the significance of explicitly considering safety in addition to stability in AV longitudinal control through damping behavior analysis. Specifically, it proposes a safety-oriented AV longitudinal control and provides recommendations on the control parameters. For the proposed AV control, an Adaptive Cruise Control (ACC) model is integrated with damping behavior analysis to model AV safety under continuous traffic perturbations. Numerical simulations are conducted to quantify the relationship between mobility and safety for AVs considering both damping behavior and control stability. Different ACC control parameters are evaluated in terms of damping and stability properties, and their safety impacts are assessed based on various surrogate safety measures such as Deceleration Rate to Avoid Crash (DRAC), Crash Potential Index (CPI) and Time-Integrated Time-to-collision (TIT). The results indicate that an underdamped state (ACC damping ratio < 1) is less safe than the critically damped state (ACC damping ratio = 1) and the overdamped state (ACC damping ratio > 1). Furthermore, given the same AV car-following time lag, ACC with a damping ratio between 1 and 1.2 provides better safety performance. Increasing the AV car-following time lag can improve both safety and stability when the remaining ACC control parameters are kept the same. In this case, the optimal safety-oriented ACC regions also increase. The findings of this study provide importa...
Source: Accident; Analysis and Prevention. - Category: Accident Prevention Authors: Source Type: research