Distributed drive electric vehicles (DDEVs) offer remarkable advantages in handling stability owing to the independent torque and steering control of each wheel. Traditional in-dependent strategies have the disadvantages of slow response speed and unsmooth control interval switching. To overcome the performance tradeoffs of traditional independent strategies, this study proposes an integrated control approach combining four-wheel steering (4WS) and direct yaw moment control (DYC) to achieve coordinated multiobjective optimization. Based on phase-plane theory, the vehicle’s stable domain is divided using a double line method, and speed-dependent control regions and weights are designed to enable smooth switching between control modes. Simulation results demonstrate that, in high-adhesion conditions, compared with the DYC-only strategy, the integrated system reduces the maximum sideslip angle by about 77.8% and the cost function peak by 22.4%. Moreover, it decreases the maximum rear-wheel steering angle by 38.4% and maximum sideslip angle by about 15.4% compared with 4WS-only strategy. Under low-adhesion conditions, compared with the DYC-only strategy, the integrated system reduces the maximum sideslip angle by about 21.1% and the cost function peak by 37.6%. Additionally, the integrated system decreases the maximum rear-wheel steering angle by 60.2% and maximum sideslip angle by about 64.3% compared with 4WS-only strategy.
Xu et al. (Thu,) studied this question.