Suppressing or limiting the differential action of the differential mechanism is the mostly adopted technique to avoid the skidding of a driving wheel of a vehicle riding on a poorly adherent surface. The devices carrying out this function unbalance the traction force distribution in the differential, generating a yaw torque acting on the vehicle as a secondary effect. If the unbalancing action is electronically controlled, this yaw torque can be used to affect the attitude of car as a torque vectoring technique. In this paper, a purpose built differential is presented and its technical features are highlighted, including the electrohydraulic actuation. Moreover, its torque vectoring capabilities are discussed, basing on the numerical simulation campaign performed deploying this device in a 7 DOFs model of a race car with low ground effect. The results of these simulations are compared with the behavior of the same vehicle equipped with a common passive locking differential, to show that the proposed one and its control logic (which relies on only measurable inputs) are able of improving the handling of the vehicle, in terms of both vehicle stability and linearity with the driver’s inputs. Therefore, this system could be considered as a completion of the common ESC (“Electronic Stability Control) systems to control the vehicle attitude when using the brake system is an inefficient solution.

Design of a Semi Active Differential to Improve the Vehicle Dynamics / Claudio Annicchiarico; Mirko Rinchi; Stefano Pellari; Renzo Capitani. - ELETTRONICO. - 1:(2014), pp. 1-10. (Intervento presentato al convegno ASME 2014 12th Biennial Conference on Engineering Systems Design and Analysis tenutosi a Copenhagen, Denmark nel July 25–27, 2014) [10.1115/ESDA2014-20157].

Design of a Semi Active Differential to Improve the Vehicle Dynamics

ANNICCHIARICO, CLAUDIO;RINCHI, MIRKO;CAPITANI, RENZO
2014

Abstract

Suppressing or limiting the differential action of the differential mechanism is the mostly adopted technique to avoid the skidding of a driving wheel of a vehicle riding on a poorly adherent surface. The devices carrying out this function unbalance the traction force distribution in the differential, generating a yaw torque acting on the vehicle as a secondary effect. If the unbalancing action is electronically controlled, this yaw torque can be used to affect the attitude of car as a torque vectoring technique. In this paper, a purpose built differential is presented and its technical features are highlighted, including the electrohydraulic actuation. Moreover, its torque vectoring capabilities are discussed, basing on the numerical simulation campaign performed deploying this device in a 7 DOFs model of a race car with low ground effect. The results of these simulations are compared with the behavior of the same vehicle equipped with a common passive locking differential, to show that the proposed one and its control logic (which relies on only measurable inputs) are able of improving the handling of the vehicle, in terms of both vehicle stability and linearity with the driver’s inputs. Therefore, this system could be considered as a completion of the common ESC (“Electronic Stability Control) systems to control the vehicle attitude when using the brake system is an inefficient solution.
2014
ASME 2014 12th Biennial Conference on Engineering Systems Design and Analysis
ASME 2014 12th Biennial Conference on Engineering Systems Design and Analysis
Copenhagen, Denmark
July 25–27, 2014
Claudio Annicchiarico; Mirko Rinchi; Stefano Pellari; Renzo Capitani
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/954337
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