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Journal Article

When and How to Apply Automatic Emergency Brakes Based on Risk Perception and Professional Driver Emergency Braking Behavior

2023-07-26
Abstract The key issues of automatic emergency braking (AEB) control algorithm are when and how to brake. This article proposes an AEB control algorithm that integrates risk perception (RP) and emergency braking characteristics of professional drivers for rear-end collision avoidance. Using the formulated RP by time to collision (TTC) and time headway (THW), the brake trigger time can be determined. Based on the professional driver fitting (PDF) characteristic, the brake pattern can be developed. Through MATLAB/Simulink simulation platform, the European New Car Assessment Programme (Euro-NCAP) test scenarios are used to verify the proposed control algorithm. The simulation results show that compared with the TTC control algorithm, PDF control algorithm, and the integrated PDF and TTC control algorithm, the proposed integrated PDF and RP control algorithm has the best performance, which can not only ensure safety and brake comfort, but also improve the road resource utilization rate.
Journal Article

Wheel Chock Key Design Elements and Geometrical Profile for Truck Vehicle Restraint

2018-06-06
Abstract Wheel chocks are rather simple compliant mechanisms for stabilizing vehicles at rest. However, chocks must be carefully designed given the complex interaction between the chock and the tire/suspension system. Despite their importance for safety, literature is surprisingly limited in terms of what makes a wheel chock efficient. Using simple but reliable quasi-static mechanical models, this study identifies mechanical requirements that help to avoid a number of failure modes associated with many existing wheel chocks. Given that chock grounding is not always possible, a chock’s maximum restraining capacity is only obtained when the wheel is completely supported by the chock. A generic chock profile is proposed to achieve this objective while mitigating undesirable failure modes. The profile is based on fundamental mechanical principles and no assumption is made on the load interaction between the chock and the wheel.
Journal Article

Vertical Takeoff and Landing Aircraft, Vertical Takeoff and Landing Ground Effects

2020-08-20
Abstract The ground-effect problems of loss of thrust and fountain-effect instabilities are quantified. Experiments to control and augment ground-effect lift and stability are presented, including jet momentum reflection and fountain redirection using various types of internal and external underbody ventral strakes. By strategically designing the vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) ventral surface, reflection of the impinging fountain momentum is possible so that instead of losing 10% thrust while in ground-effect, remarkably, thrust is augmented 10% or more to a considerable height above the ground, in addition to stabilizing random pitch and roll moments caused by fountain instability.
Journal Article

Vehicle Dynamics Control Using Model Predictive Control Allocation Combined with an Adaptive Parameter Estimator

2020-07-08
Abstract Advanced passenger vehicles are complex dynamic systems that are equipped with several actuators, possibly including differential braking, active steering, and semi-active or active suspensions. The simultaneous use of several actuators for integrated vehicle motion control has been a topic of great interest in literature. To facilitate this, a technique known as control allocation (CA) has been employed. CA is a technique that enables the coordination of various actuators of a system. One of the main challenges in the study of CA has been the representation of actuator dynamics in the optimal CA problem (OCAP). Using model predictive control allocation (MPCA), this problem has been addressed. Furthermore, the actual dynamics of actuators may vary over the lifespan of the system due to factors such as wear, lack of maintenance, etc. Therefore, it is further required to compensate for any mismatches between the actual actuator parameters and those used in the OCAP.
Journal Article

Vehicle Door Inner Frame Part Design with Knowledge-Based Engineering

2020-05-20
Abstract In this study, a computer-aided design (CAD) geometry system that is linked to each other to create a parametric form of the side rear door’s inner frame sheet piece on a passenger vehicle body in a Siemens NX environment was developed. The system was created in the NX CAD environment, using the program’s unique product development structure. The system was designed and modified for time-consuming parts. At the end of the study, the parameterized vehicle door geometries worked in the NX environment standardized the design process and accelerated the design works.
Journal Article

Understanding the Influence of Seat Belt Geometries on Belt-to-Pelvis Angle Can Help Prevent Submarining

2022-04-13
Abstract The first objective of this study, addressed in Part 1, is to use finite element (FE) human body modeling (HBM) to evaluate the tangent of the Belt-to-Pelvis angle (tanθBTP) as a submarining predictor in frontal crashes for occupants in reclined seats. The second objective, addressed in Part 2, is to use this predictor to assess two technical solutions for reducing submarining risks for two different occupant anthropometries. In Part 1, tanθBTP (the lap belt penetration from the anterior superior iliac spine [ASIS] in the abdominal direction) was evaluated in impact simulations with varying seat belt anchor positions. Sled simulations with a 56 km/h full-frontal crash pulse were performed with the SAFER HBM morphed to the anthropometry of a small female and average male. A correlation was found between the submarining predictor and submarining.
Journal Article

Three-Dimensional In-Depth Dynamic Analysis of a Ground Vehicle Experiencing a Tire Blowout

2023-08-31
Abstract To investigate the effect of a tire blowout (TBO) on the dynamics of the vehicle comprehensively, a three-dimensional full-vehicle multibody mathematical model is developed and integrated with the nonlinear Dugoff’s tire model. In order to ensure the validity of the developed model, a series of standard maneuvers is carried out and the resulting response is verified using the high-fidelity MSC Adams package. Consequently, the in-plane, as well as out-of-plane dynamics of the vehicle, is extensively examined through a sequence of TBO scenarios with various blown tires and during both rectilinear and curvilinear motion. Moreover, the different possible inputs from the driver, the road bank angle, and the antiroll bar have been accounted for. The results show that the dynamic behavior of the vehicle is tremendously affected both in-plane and out-of-plane and its directional stability is degraded.
Journal Article

Threat Identification and Defense Control Selection for Embedded Systems

2020-08-18
Abstract Threat identification and security analysis have become mandatory steps in the engineering design process of high-assurance systems, where successful cyberattacks can lead to hazardous property damage or loss of lives. This article describes a novel approach to perform security analysis on embedded systems modeled at the architectural level. The tool, called Security Threat Evaluation and Mitigation (STEM), associates threats from the Common Attack Pattern Enumeration and Classification (CAPEC) library with components and connections and suggests potential defense patterns from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Special Publication (SP) 800-53 security standard. This article also provides an illustrative example based on a drone package delivery system modeled in AADL.
Journal Article

Thermo-Mechanical Coupled Analysis-Based Design of Ventilated Brake Disc Using Genetic Algorithm and Particle Swarm Optimization

2021-08-24
Abstract The brake discs are subjected to thermal load due to sliding by the brake pad and fluctuating loads because of the braking load. This combined loading problem requires simulation using coupled thermo-mechanical analysis for design evaluation. This work presents a combined thermal and mechanical finite element analysis (FEA) and evolutionary optimization-based novel approach for estimating the optimal design parameters of the ventilated brake disc. Five parameters controlling the design: inboard plate thickness, outboard plate thickness, vane height, effective offset, and center hole radius were considered, and simulation runs were planned. A total of 27 brake disc designs with design parameters as recommended by the Taguchi method (L27) were modeled using SolidWorks, and the FEA simulation runs were carried out using the ANSYS thermal and structural analysis tool.
Journal Article

The Missing Link: Aircraft Cybersecurity at the Operational Level

2020-07-25
Abstract Aircraft cybersecurity efforts have tended to focus at the strategic or tactical levels without a clear connection between the two. There are many excellent engineering tools already in widespread use, but many organizations have not yet integrated and linked them into an overarching “campaign plan” that connects those tactical actions such as process hazard analysis, threat modeling, and probabilistic methods to the desired strategic outcome of secure and resilient systems. This article presents the combined systems security engineering process (CSSEP) as a way to fill that gap. Systems theory provides the theoretical foundation on which CSSEP is built. CSSEP is structured as a control loop in which the engineering team is the controller of the design process. The engineering team needs to have an explicit process model on how systems should be secured, and a control algorithm that determines what control actions should be selected.
Journal Article

The Lynchpin—A Novel Geometry for Modular, Tangential, Omnidirectional Flight

2023-03-15
Abstract A novel geometry for a six degrees of freedom (6DOF) unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) rotary wing aircraft is introduced and a flight mechanical analysis is conducted for an aircraft built in accordance to the thrust vectors of the proposed geometry. Furthermore, the necessary mathematical operations and control schemes are derived to fly an aircraft with the proposed geometry. A system identification of the used propulsion system with the necessary thrust reversal in the form of bidirectional motors and propellers was conducted at a whirl tower. The design of the first prototype aircraft is presented as well as the first flight test results. It could be demonstrated that an aircraft with the thrust vectors oriented according to the proposed geometry works sufficiently and offers unique maneuvering capabilities that cannot be reached with a conventional design.
Journal Article

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2022-10-21
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Journal Article

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2022-12-30
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Journal Article

Survey-Based Accident Analysis for Human-Powered Three-Wheeled Vehicles

2021-10-12
Abstract The causes of accidents involving nonconventional bicycle types have hardly been investigated in the literature to date. However, these vehicles could play an important role in reducing the CO2 emissions generated by traffic. As a basis for improving the driving safety of these environmentally friendly vehicles, this article presents the results of a survey on accidents and near-accidents of multitrack bicycle vehicles. More than 120 critical or accident situations of 86 drivers were analyzed. The situations are investigated with respect to the circumstances, the causes, and the consequences of the accidents using manual analysis and multiple correspondence analysis. A distinction is made between single accidents and accidents with another party. The aim of the survey is not to make statistically accurate statements on the frequency and probability of accidents, but rather to analyze the accident or near-accident circumstances.
Journal Article

Submarining Protection for 50th-Percentile Male Anthropomorphic Test Devices in the Rear Seat during Frontal Crash Sled Tests

2022-04-11
Abstract While historically the rear seat has been considered safer than the front seat, recent studies have suggested that adult occupants have a higher relative risk of injury and death in the rear seat compared to the front seat. Advancements in safety technologies in the front seat have outpaced those in the rear seat, where they vary greatly between vehicle makes and models. Of particular concern is occupant submarining, for which the lap belt slips off of the pelvis and directly loads the abdomen. In this study, frontal crash sled tests with seven vehicle bucks were conducted to assess submarining protection for two rear-seated 50th-percentile male anthropomorphic test devices (ATDs), the Hybrid III-50M and THOR-50M. Tests involved either a ΔV of 56 kph or 32 kph. Submarining incidence and severity for Hybrid III and THOR were assessed using posttest photographs, high-speed videos, and seat belt loads.
Journal Article

Study of Vehicle-Based Metrics for Assessing the Severity of Side Impacts

2023-10-30
Abstract A research program has been launched in Iran to develop an evaluation method for comparing the safety performance of vehicles in real-world collisions with crash test results. The goal of this research program is to flag vehicle models whose safety performance in real-world accidents does not match their crash test results. As part of this research program, a metric is needed to evaluate the severity of side impacts in crash tests and real-world accidents. In this work, several vehicle-based metrics were analyzed and calculated for a dataset of more than 500 side impact tests from the NHTSA crash test database. The correlation between the metric values and the dummy injury criteria was studied to find the most appropriate metric with the strongest correlation coefficient values with the dummy injury criteria.
Journal Article

Study of Sweepback Angles Criterion for Reusable Hypersonic Vehicle

2022-12-02
Abstract At hypersonic speed, severe aerodynamic heating is observed, and temperatures are too high to cool by radiation cooling; active cooling such as ablative cooling is helpful in this situation. The Thermal Protection System (TPS) consists of a layer of an ablative material, followed by an insulating material to lower the temperature at the inside wall of the lifting body. The surface area (considering the inside volume of the vehicle constant) of the TPS plays a vital role in heat transfer to the vehicle and heat transferred through the vehicle body. The minimum area sweepback angle (ΛArea-min) is the function of the principal radius (R) and the ratio of the principal radii of the forward bi-curvature stagnation surface (R/r). The ΛArea-min = 80° is obtained for R = 2 m and R/r = 2. The aerothermal analysis of the lifting body is of fundamental interest while designing the TPS.
Journal Article

Structural Optimization Techniques to Design Light Weight and Low Radiated Noise Components

2018-07-24
Abstract Structural optimization evolved as a preferred technique across industries to develop lightweight products. One of the widely studied topics in structural optimization is to develop methods that reduce the radiated noise from a structure, where responses like Equivalent Radiated Power (ERP) and natural frequencies used to indirectly address the noise levels. This article compares freeform optimization with topology optimization technique and investigates their effectiveness for reducing radiated noise and weight. To illustrate the same, Finite Element Method (FEM) and Boundary Element Method (BEM) analysis are performed on a sheet metal flat plate (panel) as an example and correlated the same with experimental data. Further, different optimization problem formulations have been explored on those examples and results have been compared.
Journal Article

Steering System Simulation during the Concept Phase regarding Feedback Behavior

2022-03-29
Abstract Steering feedback has an important role in good vehicle guidance by the driver. However, the design of the steering feedback usually happens late in the development process of prototype vehicles, when significant changes to the steering system are hardly possible. Hence, a steering system model is developed for the early stages of vehicle development, which is able to predict the transmission behavior of a steering system. Therefore, this article verifies that the steering system can be modeled independently of the tires and axle for relevant amplitudes of the steering feedback. The developed steering system model is a two-mass model consisting of an effective rack mass and a combined steering wheel and steering column inertia. Both are connected via the spring stiffness of the steering column and a steering gear ratio. Friction has a very dominant influence on the transmission behavior of the steering system and is therefore modeled at the column and rack.
Journal Article

Soft Computing-Based Driver Modeling for Automatic Parking of Articulated Heavy Vehicles

2023-09-09
Abstract Parking an articulated vehicle is a challenging task that requires skill, experience, and visibility from the driver. An automatic parking system for articulated vehicles can make this task easier and more efficient. This article proposes a novel method that finds an optimal path and controls the vehicle with an innovative method while considering its kinematics and environmental constraints and attempts to mathematically explain the behavior of a driver who can perform a complex scenario, called the articulated vehicle park maneuver, without falling into the jackknifing phenomena. In other words, the proposed method models how drivers park articulated vehicles in difficult situations, using different sub-scenarios and mathematical models.
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