Samaroo, Kyle, AWAN, Abdul Waheed and Islam, Sheikh (2025) Semi-Active Suspension Design for an In-Wheel-Motor-Driven Electric Vehicle Using a Dynamic Vibration-Absorbing Structure and PID-Controlled Magnetorheological Damper. Machines, 13 (1). p. 47. ISSN 2075-1702
machines-13-00047-v2.pdf - Publisher's typeset copy
Available under License Type Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) .
Download (9MB) | Preview
Abstract or description
Abstract: The in-wheel motor (IWM) powertrain layout offers greater design flexibility and higher efficiency of an electric vehicle but has limited commercial success mainly due to the concerns of increased unsprung mass. This paper proposes a semi-active suspension system for in-wheel motors that combines both a dynamic vibration-absorbing structure (DVAS) and a PID-controlled MR damper, in order to achieve optimised comfort, handling and IWM vibration for a small car application. Whilst PID control and DVAS are not entirely new concepts, the usage of both optimisation techniques in a semi-active in-wheel motor suspension has seen limited implementation, which makes the current work novel and significant. The semi-active suspension operating both in passive fail-safe mode and full feedback control was compared to a conventional in-wheel motor passive suspension in terms of sprung mass acceleration, displacement, stator acceleration, tyre deflection and suspension travel for three different road profile inputs using MATLAB/Simulink. The implementation of a PID-controlled MR damper improved road comfort and road holding performance and decreased in-wheel motor vibration over the DVAS passive suspension mainly in terms of a maximum peak amplitude decrease of 40%, 35% and 32% for the sprung mass acceleration, tyre deflection and stator acceleration, respectively. The results are significant since they show that the use of a simple, easily implemented control scheme like PID control was able to significantly improve IWM suspension performance when paired with a DVAS. This study provides further confidence to manufacturers to commercially develop and implement the IWM layout as its major disadvantage can be reasonably addressed using a simple readily available control approach.
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
Faculty: | School of Digital, Technologies and Arts > Engineering |
Depositing User: | Abdul Waheed AWAN |
Date Deposited: | 27 Jan 2025 10:20 |
Last Modified: | 27 Jan 2025 10:20 |
URI: | https://eprints.staffs.ac.uk/id/eprint/8640 |