Ride comfort performance of a vehicle using active suspension system with active disturbance rejection control

2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 78 ◽  
Author(s):  
Faried Hasbullah ◽  
Waleed F. Faris ◽  
Fadly Jashi Darsivan ◽  
Mohammad Abdelrahman
Author(s):  
Haoping Wang ◽  
Yeqing Lu ◽  
Yang Tian ◽  
Nicolai Christov

This article deals with the control problem of 7-degrees of freedom full-car suspension system which takes into account the spring-damper nonlinearities, unmodeled dynamics and external disturbances. The existing active disturbance rejection control uses an extended state observer to estimate the “total disturbance” and eliminate it with state error feedback. In this article, a new type of active disturbance rejection control is developed to improve the ride comfort of full car suspension systems taking into account the suspension nonlinearities and actuator saturation. The proposed controller combines active disturbance rejection control and fuzzy sliding mode control and is called Fuzzy Sliding Mode active disturbance rejection control. To validate the system mathematical model and analyze the controller performance, a virtual prototype is built in Adams. The simulation results demonstrate better performance of Fuzzy Sliding Mode active disturbance rejection control compared to the existing active disturbance rejection control.


2017 ◽  
Vol 40 (8) ◽  
pp. 2611-2621 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mingxing Cheng ◽  
Xiaohong Jiao

This paper presents a novel idea processing the complex non-linear dynamics of a magneto-rheological (MR) damper and the external road disturbance based on the linear extended state observer (LESO) technology, and further verifies its reasonability by application of linear active disturbance rejection control (LADRC) in the quarter-car non-linear semi-active suspension system. In order to optimize the body acceleration and dynamic tyre load to improve the ride comfort and road-handling ability, a modified active disturbance rejection control, the double linear active disturbance rejection control (DLADRC), is further proposed based on the idea of the hybrid skyhook–groundhook control strategy. LESO is used to estimate the total disturbance including the external road disturbance and the internal non-linear dynamic of the MR damper. For effectiveness validation of the proposed control scheme, comparison results with the existing linear quadratic regulation (LQR) control, hybrid skyhook–groundhook control and adaptive control strategies are presented for the same quarter-car semi-active suspension. It is shown from the simulation comparisons among these several control strategies that the semi-active suspension system with DLADRC has a better control performance on the ride comfort and road-handling ability corresponding to the body acceleration and dynamic tyre load.


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