To satisfy the stringent functional-safety requirements of steer-by-wire steering systems for advanced autonomous driving, this paper proposes a novel dual-motor collaborative fault-tolerant control strategy. The proposed approach aims to overcome the insufficient fault tolerance of conventional single-motor architectures, as well as the limited dynamic response and disturbance-rejection capability observed in existing multi-motor schemes. The key contribution is an integrated control framework consisting of two components: (i) dual-motor torque synchronization achieved via a fuzzy-PID–based mean-deviation coupling method, and (ii) a super-spiral sliding-mode control law optimized by an adaptive differential-evolution algorithm to enhance the dynamic performance and robustness of the current loop. Experimental results demonstrate that, relative to a non-synchronized baseline, the proposed strategy reduces the inter-motor current mismatch by 8.1%–78.6% across multiple operating conditions. Moreover, following fault occurrence, the proposed Self-Adaptive Differential-Evolution-algorithm-based Super-Twisting Sliding-Mode Control method shortens the stabilization time by 50%–70%, 9%–20%, and 16.7% compared with conventional PID, Super-Twisting Sliding-Mode Control methods, and classical H∞ robust control, respectively. Overall, the developed solution meets functional-safety requirements and provides a highly reliable steering-actuation mechanism for advanced autonomous driving applications.
Liu et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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