This paper investigates the safety and stability of connected cruise control (CCC) for connected automated vehicles (CAVs) in the presence of response lag.
The authors first conduct a stability analysis to derive conditions for plant stability and head-to-tail string stability of the CCC system. They show that in most cases, the CCC system needs to be both plant stable and head-to-tail string stable to achieve safety.
Next, the authors analyze the safety of the nominal CCC design using control barrier function (CBF) theory. They derive safe regions in the parameter space of the CCC gains, and show that the response lag has a detrimental effect on safety, leading to a critical lag value above which safe CCC gains do not exist.
To overcome the limitations of the nominal CCC, the authors propose a safety-critical CCC controller that leverages CBFs to minimally modify the nominal CCC when necessary to ensure safety. This allows the CAV to benefit from the high performance of CCC while guaranteeing safety, even in the presence of response lag and with connectivity to multiple vehicles ahead.
The proposed safety-critical CCC is evaluated through numerical simulations using real traffic data. The results demonstrate that the safety-critical CCC can leverage connectivity to improve safety, and it guarantees safety regardless of the lag and connectivity architecture while preserving the high performance of CCC.
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