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Description
The greenhouse gases in the atmosphere have reached a highest level due to high number of vehicles. A Fuel Cell Hybrid Electric Vehicle (FCHEV) has zero greenhouse gas emissions compared to conventional ICE vehicles or Hybrid Electric Vehicles and hence is a better alternative. All Electric Vehicle (AEVs) have longer

The greenhouse gases in the atmosphere have reached a highest level due to high number of vehicles. A Fuel Cell Hybrid Electric Vehicle (FCHEV) has zero greenhouse gas emissions compared to conventional ICE vehicles or Hybrid Electric Vehicles and hence is a better alternative. All Electric Vehicle (AEVs) have longer charging time which is unfavorable. A fully charged battery gives less range compared to a FCHEV with a full hydrogen tank. So FCHEV has an advantage of a quick fuel up and more mileage than AEVs. A Proton Electron Membrane Fuel Cell (PEMFC) is the commonly used kind of fuel cell vehicles but it possesses slow current dynamics and hence not suitable to be the sole power source in a vehicle. Therefore, improving the transient power capabilities of fuel cell to satisfy the road load demand is critical.

This research studies integration of Ultra-Capacitor (UC) to FCHEV. The objective is to analyze the effect of integrating UCs on the transient response of FCHEV powertrain. UCs has higher power density which can overcome slow dynamics of fuel cell. A power management strategy utilizing peak power shaving strategy is implemented. The goal is to decrease power load on batteries and operate fuel cell stack in it’s most efficient region. Complete model to simulate the physical behavior of UC-Integrated FCHEV (UC-FCHEV) is developed using Matlab/SIMULINK. The fuel cell polarization curve is utilized to devise operating points of the fuel cell to maintain its operation at most efficient region. Results show reduction of hydrogen consumption in aggressive US06 drive cycle from 0.29 kg per drive cycle to 0.12 kg. The maximum charge/discharge battery current was reduced from 286 amperes to 110 amperes in US06 drive cycle. Results for the FUDS drive cycle show a reduction in fuel consumption from 0.18 kg to 0.05 kg in one drive cycle. This reduction in current increases the life of the battery since its protected from overcurrent. The SOC profile of the battery also shows that the battery is not discharged to its minimum threshold which increasing the health of the battery based on number of charge/discharge cycles.
ContributorsJethani, Puneet V. (Author) / Mayyas, Abdel (Thesis advisor) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Ren, Yi (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
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Description
The environmental impact of the fossil fuels has increased tremendously in the last decade. This impact is one of the most contributing factors of global warming. This research aims to reduce the amount of fuel consumed by vehicles through optimizing the control scheme for the future route information. Taking advantage

The environmental impact of the fossil fuels has increased tremendously in the last decade. This impact is one of the most contributing factors of global warming. This research aims to reduce the amount of fuel consumed by vehicles through optimizing the control scheme for the future route information. Taking advantage of more degrees of freedom available within PHEV, HEV, and FCHEV “energy management” allows more margin to maximize efficiency in the propulsion systems. The application focuses on reducing the energy consumption in vehicles by acquiring information about the road grade. Road elevations are obtained by use of Geographic Information System (GIS) maps to optimize the controller. The optimization is then reflected on the powertrain of the vehicle.The approach uses a Model Predictive Control (MPC) algorithm that allows the energy management strategy to leverage road grade to prepare the vehicle for minimizing energy consumption during an uphill and potential energy harvesting during a downhill. The control algorithm will predict future energy/power requirements of the vehicle and optimize the performance by instructing the power split between the internal combustion engine (ICE) and the electric-drive system. Allowing for more efficient operation and higher performance of the PHEV, and HEV. Implementation of different strategies, such as MPC and Dynamic Programming (DP), is considered for optimizing energy management systems. These strategies are utilized to have a low processing time. This approach allows the optimization to be integrated with ADAS applications, using current technology for implementable real time applications.

The Thesis presents multiple control strategies designed, implemented, and tested using real-world road elevation data from three different routes. Initial simulation based results show significant energy savings. The savings range between 11.84% and 25.5% for both Rule Based (RB) and DP strategies on the real world tested routes. Future work will take advantage of vehicle connectivity and ADAS systems to utilize Vehicle to Vehicle (V2V), Vehicle to Infrastructure (V2I), traffic information, and sensor fusion to further optimize the PHEV and HEV toward more energy efficient operation.
ContributorsAlzorgan, Mohammad (Author) / Mayyas, Abdel Ra’ouf (Thesis advisor) / Berman, Spring (Committee member) / Ren, Yi (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
Deep neural network-based methods have been proved to achieve outstanding performance on object detection and classification tasks. Deep neural networks follow the ``deeper model with deeper confidence'' belief to gain a higher recognition accuracy. However, reducing these networks' computational costs remains a challenge, which impedes their deployment on embedded devices.

Deep neural network-based methods have been proved to achieve outstanding performance on object detection and classification tasks. Deep neural networks follow the ``deeper model with deeper confidence'' belief to gain a higher recognition accuracy. However, reducing these networks' computational costs remains a challenge, which impedes their deployment on embedded devices. For instance, the intersection management of Connected Autonomous Vehicles (CAVs) requires running computationally intensive object recognition algorithms on low-power traffic cameras. This dissertation aims to study the effect of a dynamic hardware and software approach to address this issue. Characteristics of real-world applications can facilitate this dynamic adjustment and reduce the computation. Specifically, this dissertation starts with a dynamic hardware approach that adjusts itself based on the toughness of input and extracts deeper features if needed. Next, an adaptive learning mechanism has been studied that use extracted feature from previous inputs to improve system performance. Finally, a system (ARGOS) was proposed and evaluated that can be run on embedded systems while maintaining the desired accuracy. This system adopts shallow features at inference time, but it can switch to deep features if the system desires a higher accuracy. To improve the performance, ARGOS distills the temporal knowledge from deep features to the shallow system. Moreover, ARGOS reduces the computation furthermore by focusing on regions of interest. The response time and mean average precision are adopted for the performance evaluation to evaluate the proposed ARGOS system.
ContributorsFarhadi, Mohammad (Author) / Yang, Yezhou (Thesis advisor) / Vrudhula, Sarma (Committee member) / Wu, Carole-Jean (Committee member) / Ren, Yi (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
Description
Autonomous Driving (AD) systems are being researched and developed actively in recent days to solve the task of controlling the vehicles safely without human intervention. One method to solve such task is through deep Reinforcement Learning (RL) approach. In deep RL, the main objective is to find an optimal control

Autonomous Driving (AD) systems are being researched and developed actively in recent days to solve the task of controlling the vehicles safely without human intervention. One method to solve such task is through deep Reinforcement Learning (RL) approach. In deep RL, the main objective is to find an optimal control behavior, often called policy performed by an agent, which is AD system in this case. This policy is usually learned through Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) based on the observations that the agent perceives along with rewards feedback received from environment.However, recent studies demonstrated the vulnerability of such control policies learned through deep RL against adversarial attacks. This raises concerns about the application of such policies to risk-sensitive tasks like AD. Previous adversarial attacks assume that the threats can be broadly realized in two ways: First one is targeted attacks through manipu- lation of the agent’s complete observation in real time and the other is untargeted attacks through manipulation of objects in environment. The former assumes full access to the agent’s observations at almost all time, while the latter has no control over outcomes of attack. This research investigates the feasibility of targeted attacks through physical adver- sarial objects in the environment, a threat that combines the effectiveness and practicality. Through simulations on one of the popular AD systems, it is demonstrated that a fixed optimal policy can be malfunctioned over time by an attacker e.g., performing an unintended self-parking, when an adversarial object is present. The proposed approach is formulated in such a way that the attacker can learn a dynamics of the environment and also utilizes common knowledge of agent’s dynamics to realize the attack. Further, several experiments are conducted to show the effectiveness of the proposed attack on different driving scenarios empirically. Lastly, this work also studies robustness of object location, and trade-off between the attack strength and attack length based on proposed evaluation metrics.
ContributorsBuddareddygari, Prasanth (Author) / Yang, Yezhou (Thesis advisor) / Ren, Yi (Committee member) / Fainekos, Georgios (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021