Parking Assistance for Trailer-Truck Transport Vehicles Using Sensor Fusion and Motion Planning
George Alenchery, Thomas Jeske, Tova Quinones, Lentz Fortune, Tristan Lindo-Slones + 2 more
TLDR
This paper proposes an autonomous parking framework for trailer-trucks, integrating sensor fusion, Hybrid A* planning, and NMPC for complex maneuvers.
Key contributions
- Presents a comprehensive framework for autonomous trailer-truck parking assistance.
- Integrates sensor fusion, Hybrid A* path planning, and Nonlinear Model Predictive Control (NMPC).
- Addresses challenges of articulated vehicle motion and environmental constraints during low-speed parking.
- Demonstrates a proof-of-concept simulation for articulated vehicle path planning in a command-line environment.
Why it matters
Autonomous parking for large articulated vehicles like trailer-trucks is a significant challenge. This paper provides a robust, integrated framework combining advanced perception and control, crucial for improving safety and efficiency in logistics.
Original Abstract
Autonomous driving technology has rapidly evolved over the past decade, offering significant improvements in transportation efficiency, safety, and cost reduction. While much of the progress has focused on highway driving and obstacle avoidance, low-speed maneuvers such as parking remain among the most difficult challenges for autonomous systems. This challenge is especially pronounced in trailer-truck transport vehicles due to their articulated motion and environmental constraints. This paper presents a proposed framework for autonomous truck parking that integrates perception, motion planning, control systems, and infrastructure awareness. By combining sensor fusion, Hybrid A* path planning, nonlinear model predictive control (NMPC), and data-driven parking systems, this work highlights the importance of system-level coordination for reliable and scalable autonomous parking solutions. As a proof-of-concept implementation, we adapted an open-source A* path planning simulation to incorporate a tractor-trailer kinematic model, demonstrating articulated vehicle path planning within a command-line simulation environment, with jackknife prevention identified as an area requiring further development.
📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest
Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.