In all driving situations, it is the driver’s responsibility to adapt the driving style to weather and
road conditions. For autonomous driving vehicles and for highly automated driving functions,
this responsibility is transferred to the system, which has to be able to estimate the current
road condition in order to plan required interventions for steering, driving or braking.
Information on the current road condition must therefore be available in time and with
sufficient accuracy within the system to fulfil the required trajectory planning and stabilisation
tasks for the automated driving functions.
Due to the high importance of the road condition on vehicle safety, research on identifying
the maximum tyre-road friction coefficient during driving has been conducted for several
decades so far. However, reproducibility and accuracy of results, as well as costs of the
proposed methods have still been a limiting factor. Thus, none of the methods proposed in
literature have been able to overcome an early prototype status.
As part of the proposed project, a reference value of the current road condition will be
determined to develop, optimize and validate methods for maximum tire-road friction
estimation which can be used for real-time applications in automated driving functions. In
addition, realistic driving data will be gathered which will be obtained in real traffic situations
(no test track manoeuvres) and under realistic weather and road conditions. This data shall
serve as a database for the development of the aforementioned real-time applications. The
proposed feasibility study will determine the accuracy and robustness of a reference value of
the road conditions determined with the proposed method. To obtain an accurate reference
value, on one hand knowledge of vehicle and tire properties is required. On the other hand,
the observation of parameters which affect the tyre-road interaction in a crucial way is
required. These parameters may vary during several operations of the vehicle (e.g. payload)
or during one drive (e.g. road slope, longitudinal velocity).
With the results of the proposed project, it will be possible to conduct further research
projects. The scope of these potential projects strongly depends on the outcome of this
research project, and may vary from projects with small companies and niche applications to
projects with automobile manufacturers (OEM).