Tammy Meehan and Thomas Hedblom of 3M consider the ongoing development of technology needed to introduce connected and autonomous vehicles.
     
The transportation industry is in the midst of the most dramatic shift since Henry Ford introduced horseless carriages. Already we are seeing the increased use of advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) which, along with the introduction of autonomous vehicles in the next few decades, will bring profound changes to vehicles and the environment in which they operate. 
     
Well before fully autonomous vehicles and trucks can appear on the roads, work is underway to build an entirely new ecosystem needed for this technology to operate. This requires extensive research to create intelligent transportation materials and systems and is a collaborative effort between industry, academic institutions and government organisations. The current focus of the Traffic Safety and Security Division is on areas ranging from machine-readable and smart sign technology and more robust and visible pavement markings to wireless communications beacons and safer passage through construction zones.
     
 
Machine-readable
The future of transportation will require roadways to become readable by machines. Part of how this will be achieved are road markings that can be read by sensors to enable ADAS and autonomous systems to detect lines.
     
There is strong industry consensus that pavement markings play an integral role in moving to higher levels of automation. On February 21, 2017 the House Transportation Committee held a hearing on building infrastructure for the 21st century and invited comment from industry leaders. A written statement by BMW of North America CEO Ludwig Willisch stated that roadways must be properly prepared for autonomous cars so that vehicle sensors and cameras can read road markings and signage to make the correct decisions. Willisch added that well-maintained streets and uniform lane markings, as well as consistent signs and traffic signals, would be helpful in accelerating the deployment of [autonomous vehicles].
     
However, pavement markings do not provide the total solution. They form part of an overall system of redundancy which is critical to delivering improved safety via partially- or fully-autonomous vehicles. Redundancy in safety systems and standardisation of the infrastructure will be the backbone of a successful transition from the current environment to an environment where automated vehicles share the road. 
 
Autonomous vehicle solution developers agree that at  least four layers of redundancy are required to effectively process and  utilise sensor-supplied information accurately and safely. While this  does not necessarily mean four unique types of sensors, it does mean  that multiple sensors and processes work together to provide an  environment with backups to the backups to the backups. 
     
Simply  put, a single mechanism for governing an autonomous vehicle is too  risky. Consider a vehicle using only GPS to navigate that loses the  signal on entering a tunnel or while driving through an urban canyon, or  after the satellite fails. Redundant systems ensure that additional  mechanisms are in place to provide the information needed to continue  operating safely even when the primary system fails. A principle that is  already a standard in the aerospace industry, the concepts of  redundancy and standardisation, is widely accepted by the ADAS standards  committees and AOEMs (automotive original equipment manufacturers).
     
One  example of active research in this area is a joint project between 
     
“The Road  Markings for Machine Vision Project illustrates the importance of  collaboration in such the complex and uncharted territory of autonomous  systems” noted Paul Carlson, research engineer at the Texas A&M  Transportation Institute.
     
Another  critical element of creating smarter infrastructure is systems that  allow vehicles to interpret information, and central to this is the  evolution of automated sensing and the infrastructure to be sensed.  While traditional signs and pavement markings were designed for human  vision, future infrastructure will need to provide information to both  humans and sensing systems designed for ADAS and automated vehicles. 
     
For  its part, 3M is working on improving the visibility of pavement  markings for both humans and machines across a variety of daylight and  night-time conditions. In general, enhancements to pavement markings  designed to improve detectability by the human eye also improve  detection by an optical camera in a vehicle. In fact, a camera  ultimately provides a more consistent evaluation of the pavement marking  than the average human eye and both human and machine vision need to be  supported for the foreseeable future. This drives a need for common  objectives: pavement markings must exhibit sufficient levels of daytime  contrast compared to the adjacent roadway surface, and provide enough  retroreflectivity and colour contrast at night-time in ways that ensure  both humans and camera systems can see the lines while driving. 
     
  
Marking durability
The  durability of the pavement markings is an important consideration to  ensure consistent readability over time, especially in a variety of  extreme weather conditions. The use of high-index microcrystalline  ceramic beads in  pavement markings has resulted in highly durable  optics that are abrasion-resistant and can withstand mechanical  challenges, such as sanding and salting. Not only are the ceramic beads  harder than sand, they offer high dry reflectivity and wet  retroreflectivity during daylight and at night-time. Now, researchers  are working on the next generation to extend the warranted period for  retained retroreflective performance from the current minimum of four  years (in northern areas) and up to six years in southern non-snowplough  states. 
 
Another critical  component of a infrastructure  compatible with both ADAS and autonomous  vehicles is developing road  signs with improved readability for humans  and camera-equipped  vehicles. Next-generation signs will provide more  data to drivers and  automated vehicles as well as dynamic updates to the  information should  road conditions change. 
     
To   facilitate this development, 3M continues to enhance its Dedicated   Short Range Communication (DSRC) Multi-Channel Test Tool, which verifies   transmitted data and protocol for connected vehicle technology and   service/application initiatives. It detects transmitting DSRC units   (roadside or on board) and monitors the control, or service and   dedicated safety channels. It can be used by equipment providers and   DoTs to check wireless V2V, V2I) and V2X communications to ensure   critical details of a changing environment are communicated accurately   and rapidly to connected and automated vehicles [see illustration].   Future generations of passive signage will also contain embedded smart   systems to provide additional and more relevant information to drivers. 
     
  
Regulatory environment
The environment needed to enable autonomous vehicles is vast and enormously complex. To create an environment optimised for autonomous vehicles that can fulfil the promise of increased safety, the infrastructure needs to be developed in tandem with the expanded functionality being developed for vehicles. Multiple transportation industry stakeholders are working together to define the safety challenges that automated vehicles present, to set realistic expectations and to deliver lasting, permanent solutions.The US DoT published the Federal Automated Vehicles Policy in September 2016. In its words, “the excitement around highly automated vehicles (HAVs) starts with safety.” In 2015 alone, 35,092 people died on US roadways. Ninety-four percent of crashes are attributed to human choice or error.
Ultimately, the automated driving future is not just about the technology that OEMs put into their vehicles. It is about a broad and integrated system that allows cars to communicate with each other and with the driving ecosystem to keep drivers and other roadway users safe.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS: Tammy Meehan and Thomas Hedblom are respectively global portfolio manager, Intelligent Transportation and division scientist with 3M.
    
        
        
        
        



