Patent classifications
B60W2520/403
VEHICLE STABILITY CONTROL METHOD AND DEVICE
A vehicle stability control method and a vehicle stability control device are provided. The method may be applied to an intelligent automobile field such as intelligent driving or autonomous driving, and is used to control lateral stability of a front axis and rear axis distributed driven vehicle. In this method, a yawing movement of the vehicle is considered, and an additional yawing moment for maintaining lateral stability of the vehicle is provided by compensating for front-axis and rear-axis slip ratios, to control lateral stability of the vehicle and therefore improve stability of the vehicle during driving.
BEHAVIOR CONTROL APPARATUS AND BEHAVIOR CONTROL METHOD
A behavior control apparatus for an electric vehicle includes a torque balancing unit that sets a distribution between a front wheel driving torque and a rear wheel driving torque according to a target yaw rate; sets the distributed front wheel driving torque to a target front wheel driving torque and sets the distributed rear wheel driving torque to a target rear wheel driving torque in a case where the distribution ratio of the rear wheel driving torque to the front wheel driving torque is less than a limit value; and sets the target front wheel driving torque and the target rear wheel driving torque in a manner that a braking force is produced at least on the rear wheel in a case where the distribution ratio of the rear wheel driving torque to the front wheel driving torque is equal to or more than the limit value.
METHOD OF CONTROLLING DRIVING OF VEHICLE BY ESTIMATING FRICTIONAL COEFFICIENT OF ROAD SURFACE
The present disclosure provides a method of controlling driving of a vehicle by estimating a road frictional coefficient, the method including distributing torque to a front wheel and a rear wheel to satisfy required torque for driving, by a controller, in a four-wheel drive (4WD) vehicle including a front wheel driving device and a rear wheel driving device installed therein, and performing torque excitation control for increasing torque applied to one of the front wheel and the rear wheel to which the torque is distributed while the vehicle is driven, and simultaneously, changing torque applied to a remaining one of the front wheel and the rear wheel in such a way that the sum of front wheel torque and rear wheel torque satisfies required torque, by the controller.
Four-wheel-drive vehicle
A four-wheel-drive vehicle including a powertrain operable to adjust a front- and rear-wheel driving force ratio that is a ratio between a driving force of front wheels and a driving force of rear wheels includes a control device that controls the powertrain and adjusts the front- and rear-wheel driving force ratio so as to reduce the driving force of the front wheels that are steered wheels, when it is detected that emergency avoidance to avoid collision with an avoidance target ahead in a traveling direction is necessary.
Vehicle Energy Management System and Related Methods
A through the road (TTR) hybridization strategy is proposed to facilitate introduction of hybrid electric vehicle technology in a significant portion of current and expected trucking fleets. In some cases, the technologies can be retrofitted onto an existing vehicle (e.g., a truck, a tractor unit, a trailer, a tractor-trailer configuration, at a tandem, etc.). In some cases, the technologies can be built into new vehicles. In some cases, one vehicle may be built or retrofitted to operate in tandem with another and provide the hybridization benefits contemplated herein. By supplementing motive forces delivered through a primary drivetrain and fuel-fed engine with supplemental torque delivered at one or more electrically-powered drive axles, improvements in overall fuel efficiency and performance may be delivered, typically without significant redesign of existing components and systems that have been proven in the trucking industry.
Control apparatus for four-wheel-drive vehicle
A control apparatus for a four-wheel-drive vehicle is configured to, during braking of the vehicle in a two-wheel-drive state, determine whether or not a degree of a yaw movement for deflecting the vehicle is larger than a predetermined first degree. When the degree of the yaw movement is larger than the first degree, the control apparatus increases a first coupling torque of a first coupling device and a second coupling torque of a second coupling device to a predetermined first torque value which is larger than zero, and controls a ground contact load adjusting device in such a manner that a first ground contact load at a rear wheel at an outer side with respect to the yaw movement becomes larger than a second ground contact load at a rear wheel at an inner side with respect to the yaw movement by a predetermined first load difference or more.
Vehicle Energy Management System and Related Methods
A through the road (TTR) hybridization strategy is proposed to facilitate introduction of hybrid electric vehicle technology in a significant portion of current and expected trucking fleets. In some cases, the technologies can be retrofitted onto an existing vehicle (e.g., a truck, a tractor unit, a trailer, a tractor-trailer configuration, at a tandem, etc.). In some cases, the technologies can be built into new vehicles. In some cases, one vehicle may be built or retrofitted to operate in tandem with another and provide the hybridization benefits contemplated herein. By supplementing motive forces delivered through a primary drivetrain and fuel-fed engine with supplemental torque delivered at one or more electrically-powered drive axles, improvements in overall fuel efficiency and performance may be delivered, typically without significant redesign of existing components and systems that have been proven in the trucking industry.
TRACTOR UNIT WITH ON-BOARD REGENERATIVE BRAKING ENERGY STORAGE FOR STOPOVER HVAC OPERATION WITHOUT ENGINE IDLE
A through the road (TTR) hybridization strategy is proposed to facilitate introduction of hybrid electric vehicle technology in a significant portion of current and expected trucking fleets. In some cases, the technologies can be retrofitted onto an existing vehicle (e.g., a trailer, a tractor-trailer configuration, etc.). In some cases, the technologies can be built into new vehicles. In some cases, one vehicle may be built or retrofitted to operate in tandem with another and provide the hybridization benefits contemplated herein. By supplementing motive forces delivered through a primary drivetrain and fuel-fed engine with supplemental torque delivered at one or more electrically-powered drive axles, improvements in overall fuel efficiency and performance may be delivered, typically without significant redesign of existing components and systems that have been proven in the trucking industry.
TRACTOR UNIT WITH ON-BOARD REGENERATIVE BRAKING ENERGY STORAGE FOR STOPOVER HVAC OPERATION WITHOUT ENGINE IDLE
A through the road (TTR) hybridization strategy is proposed to facilitate introduction of hybrid electric vehicle technology in a significant portion of current and expected trucking fleets. In some cases, the technologies can be retrofitted onto an existing vehicle (e.g., a trailer, a tractor-trailer configuration, etc.). In some cases, the technologies can be built into new vehicles. In some cases, one vehicle may be built or retrofitted to operate in tandem with another and provide the hybridization benefits contemplated herein. By supplementing motive forces delivered through a primary drivetrain and fuel-fed engine with supplemental torque delivered at one or more electrically-powered drive axles, improvements in overall fuel efficiency and performance may be delivered, typically without significant redesign of existing components and systems that have been proven in the trucking industry.
Tractor Unit With On-Board Regenerative Braking Energy Storage for Stopover HVAC Operation Without Engine Idle
A through the road (TTR) hybridization strategy is proposed to facilitate introduction of hybrid electric vehicle technology in a significant portion of current and expected trucking fleets. In some cases, the technologies can be retrofitted onto an existing vehicle (e.g., a trailer, a tractor-trailer configuration, etc.). In some cases, the technologies can be built into new vehicles. In some cases, one vehicle may be built or retrofitted to operate in tandem with another and provide the hybridization benefits contemplated herein. By supplementing motive forces delivered through a primary drivetrain and fuel-fed engine with supplemental torque delivered at one or more electrically-powered drive axles, improvements in overall fuel efficiency and performance may be delivered, typically without significant redesign of existing components and systems that have been proven in the trucking industry.