Skip to main content

Autonomous truck platooning moves up a gear with NXP and DAF Trucks

NXP Semiconductors is setting the pace in truck platooning with full-size commercial vehicles that can run at 80kmph only 11 metres apart, offering up to 11 per cent in fuel savings. The Dutch technology company believes that “there’s no better place than truck platooning to demonstrate the merits of autonomous driving.” Its research team has been working with DAF Trucks to develop leading edge technology that can make driving decisions ‘30 times faster than human reaction time’. NXP says that adapt
November 25, 2016 Read time: 4 mins
566 NXP Semiconductors is setting the pace in truck platooning with full-size commercial vehicles that can run at 80kmph only 11 metres apart, offering up to 11 per cent in fuel savings. The Dutch technology company believes that “there’s no better place than truck platooning to demonstrate the merits of autonomous driving.”

Its research team has been working with 1941 DAF Trucks to develop leading edge technology that can make driving decisions ‘30 times faster than human reaction time’.

NXP says that adaptive cruise control, vehicle-to-vehicle communication systems and enhanced radar are some of the essential building blocks that allow truck platooning and the company already has in place a system that it claims allows two or more trucks to electronically couple together so that accelerating and braking by the lead truck is relayed instantaneously to following trucks, guiding their actions.

The end “result is closer following distances between trucks, with significant increases in fuel efficiency and safety,” says NXP. And, at the European Truck Platooning Challenge held earlier this year, NXP, DAF Trucks, TNO and Ricardo achieved a breakthrough, platooning trucks only 0.5 seconds apart.

Running a line of trucks close together reduces the amount of air turbulence and drag faced by each truck. According to NXP, in a five-truck platoon the fuel savings compute to two per cent for the lead truck, 11 per cent for the middle truck, and nine per cent for the last two trucks”.

The NXP, DAF Trucks, 7087 TNO and 5606 Ricardo research team is now seeking to cut the minimum distance between trucks to seven metres at 80 km per hour in 2017 and a new ‘enhanced radar’ technology has been developed by NXP to allow the platoon to detect road interferences (such as cars cutting in) faster and more accurately to seamlessly adjust the distance between the trucks.

The next generation S32R27 radar will play an important role in the future ability of a vehicle to quickly make precise, safety-related decisions. Autonomous vehicles will need to accurately detect and classify objects says NXP and it believes the NXP S32R27 Radar MCU offers a leap in performance of four times over the previous MPC577X product. NXP says this means higher accuracy and safety for applications such as collision avoidance, lane change assist, autonomous emergency braking, radar cocooning with 360-degree vision or adaptive cruise control. In intelligent transport systems, vulnerable road users like pedestrians, motorcycles and bicycles can be detected and tracked much faster.

Running a flotilla of trucks along the highway like a line of railway carriages could mean big labour savings for haulage operators too, says Jack Martens, project manager advanced technology at DAF Trucks. If the driver of the leading vehicle is considered as the only driver “working”, perhaps the drivers in the following trucks could be considered at rest and be allowed to have their tachographs switched off.

These sorts of benefit would need legal interpretation however, says Martens, who was also keen to point out that, for the time being, DAF will only experiment with two-truck platoons. DAF is worried about the anti-social implications of running long truck convoys on roads where the public has not been prepared for such things, and where run-in lanes could be blocked as the platoon passes by.

“What we’re really looking at is self-driving robots on wheels,” adds Kurt Sievers, general manager NXP Automotive, “and, through a combination of different sensors, we will soon see robot vehicles on the road that can see their environment faster than, more reliably than and more accurately than a human being. Connect the vehicle to things like traffic lights and the traffic infrastructure around it, give it the ability to see round corners, give it high precision digital maps and AI (artificial intelligence) … and we can start to replace the human being.”

Two strands of development are also emerging. The car and truck manufacturers are following an evolutionary path, adding self-driving technology to their product offerings bit by bit. The revolutionaries, like Google, apple and uber have gone straight there without the baggage of vast manufacturing plants and dealership networks. “For the first group it is all about the vehicle,” says Sievers, “and for the second group, it is all about the service. NXP supports both of them.”

Related Content

  • June 2, 2015
    Self-driving car safety perspectives
    At yesterday’s Opening Plenary, Chris Urmson’s keynote speech dealt with the reality of driverless cars on our roads. By far and away their greatest benefit to mankind will be the potential to achieve an incredible saving of life and injury on the roads, as Urmson, director of the Google Self-Driving Car program, revealed to delegates. In response to an Associated Press article last month disclosing that self-driving cars have been involved in four accidents in the state of California, Urmson revealed th
  • February 11, 2016
    US regulator ‘paves the way for Google’s self-driving car’
    A letter to Google, the US federal transport regulator, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), appears to pave the way for self-driving cars, but adds the proviso that the rule-making could take some time. Google had requested clarification of a number of provisions in the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSSs) as they apply to Google’s described design for self-driving vehicles (SDVs). “If no human occupant of the vehicle can actually drive the vehicle, it is more reasonable
  • October 17, 2019
    Getting C/AVs from pipedream to reality
    The UK government has suggested that driverless cars could be on the roads by 2021. But designers and engineers are grappling with a number of difficult issues, muses Chris Hayhurst of MathWorks Earlier this year, the UK government made the bold statement that by 2021, driverless cars will be on the UK’s roads. But is this an achievable reality? Driverless technology already has its use cases on our roads, with levels of autonomy ranked on a scale. At one end of the spectrum, level 1 is defined by th
  • October 29, 2015
    Counting the environmental costs of ITS deployment
    David Crawford looks at the latest thinking about calculating the benefits associated with the environmental side of ITS schemes. The penny is dropping that some environmental costs “are being shifted outside the traditional bounds of evaluation methods” for ITS-based road transport projects, according to researchers at the UK University of Leeds’ Institute for Transport Studies.