Seminar Report
Seminar Report
on
ANTI-LOCK BRAKING
SYSTEM
BACHELOR OF ENGINEERING
In
Electronics and Communication Engineering
SRM UNIVERSITY
Submitted to :
Mrs. Anilet Bala
Senior Manager
Submitted by :
Ms. Divya Sharma
VI Year ( ECE)
B.TECH
DECLARATION
I hereby declare that the seminar report is a record of bonafide work done by me under the
esteemed guidance of Mrs. Anilet Bala.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
The success and final outcome of this project report required a lot of guidance and assistance
from many people and I am extremely fortunate to have got this all along the completion of my
seminar report.
I owe my profound gratitude to our training guide Mrs. Anilet Bala who took keen
interest on my training and guided me all along, till the completion of my training by providing
all necessary information.
I heartily thank my course instructor, Mrs. Anilet Bala, Professor, Department of Electronics
and Communication, for her valuable suggestions and time to time consultation. I am thankful to
and fortunate enough to get constant encouragement, support and constant guidance in this
course.
CONTENTS
S.No
.
1.
1.2
1.3
1.4
1.5
1.6
1.7
CONTENTS
ANTI LOCK BRAKING SYSTEM
INTRODUCTION
WORKING
1.3.1 EARLY SYSTEMS
1.3.2 MORDERN SYSTEMS
OPERATION
COMPONENTS
1.5.1 SPEED SENSORS
1.5.2 VALVES
1.5.3 PUMP
1.5.4 CONTROLLER
USES
EFFECTIVENESS
PAGE
NO.
1.1 INTRODUCTION
Anti-lock braking system (ABS) is an automobile safety system that allows
the wheels on a motor vehicle to maintain tractive contact with the road
surface according to driver inputs while braking, preventing the wheels from
locking up (ceasing rotation) and avoiding uncontrolled skidding. It is an
automated system that uses the principles of threshold braking and cadence
braking which were practiced by skillful drivers with previous generation
braking systems. It does this at a much faster rate and with better control
than a driver could manage.
ABS generally offers improved vehicle control and decreases stopping
distances on dry and slippery surfaces; however, on loose gravel or snowcovered surfaces, ABS can significantly increase braking distance, although
still improving vehicle control.
Since initial widespread use in production cars, anti-lock braking systems
have been improved considerably. Recent versions not only prevent wheel
lock under braking, but also electronically control the front-to-rear brake
bias. This function, depending on its specific capabilities and
implementation, is known as electronic brakeforce
distribution (EBD), traction control system, emergency brake assist,
or electronic stability control (ESC).
1.3 HISTORY
1.3.1 Early systems
ABS was first developed for aircraft use in 1929 by the
French automobile and aircraft pioneer Gabriel Voisin, as threshold
braking on airplanes. These systems use a flywheel and valve attached to a
hydraulic line that feeds the brake cylinders. The flywheel is attached to a
drum that runs at the same speed as the wheel. In normal braking, the drum
and flywheel should spin at the same speed. However, when a wheel slows
down, then the drum would do the same, leaving the flywheel spinning at a
faster rate. This causes the valve to open, allowing a small amount of brake
fluid to bypass the master cylinder into a local reservoir, lowering the
pressure on the cylinder and releasing the brakes. The use of the drum and
flywheel meant the valve only opened when the wheel was turning. In
testing, a 30% improvement in braking performance was noted, because the
pilots immediately applied full brakes instead of slowly increasing pressure in
order to find the skid point. An additional benefit was the elimination of
burned or burst tires.
By the early 1950s, the Dunlop Maxaret anti-skid system was in widespread
aviation use in the UK, with aircraft such as the Avro Vulcan and Handley
Page Victor, Vickers Viscount, Vickers Valiant, English Electric Lightning, de
Havilland Comet 2c, de Havilland Sea Vixen, and later aircraft, such as
the Vickers VC10, Hawker Siddeley Trident,Hawker Siddeley 125, Hawker
Siddeley HS 748 and derived British Aerospace ATP, and BAC OneEleven being fitted with Maxaret as standard.[5] Maxaret, while reducing
braking distances by up to 30% in icy or wet conditions, also increased tyre
life, and had the additional advantage of allowing take-offs and landings in
conditions that would preclude flying at all in non-Maxaret equipped aircraft.
In 1958, a Royal Enfield Super Meteor motorcycle was used by the Road
Research Laboratory to test the Maxaret anti-lock brake.[6] The experiments
demonstrated that anti-lock brakes can be of great value to motorcycles, for
which skidding is involved in a high proportion of accidents. Stopping
distances were reduced in most of the tests compared with locked wheel
braking, particularly on slippery surfaces, in which the improvement could be
as much as 30 percent. Enfield's technical director at the time, Tony WilsonJones, saw little future in the system, however, and it was not put into
production by the company.
A fully mechanical system saw limited automobile use in the 1960s in
the Ferguson P99 racing car, the Jensen FF, and the experimental all wheel
drive Ford Zodiac, but saw no further use; the system proved expensive and
unreliable.
The first fully electronic anti lock system was developed in the late 60s for
the Concorde aircraft.
1.4 OPERATION
The anti-lock brake controller is also known as the CAB (Controller Anti-lock
Brake).
Typically ABS includes a central electronic control unit (ECU), four wheel
speed sensors, and at least two hydraulic valves within the brake hydraulics.
The ECU constantly monitors the rotational speed of each wheel; if it detects
a wheel rotating significantly slower than the others, a condition indicative of
impending wheel lock, it actuates the valves to reduce hydraulic pressure to
the brake at the affected wheel, thus reducing the braking force on that
wheel; the wheel then turns faster. Conversely, if the ECU detects a wheel
turning significantly faster than the others, brake hydraulic pressure to the
wheel is increased so the braking force is reapplied, slowing down the wheel.
This process is repeated continuously and can be detected by the driver via
brake pedal pulsation. Some anti-lock systems can apply or release braking
pressure 15 times per second. Because of this, the wheels of cars equipped
with ABS are practically impossible to lock even during panic braking in
extreme conditions.
The ECU is programmed to disregard differences in wheel rotative speed
below a critical threshold, because when the car is turning, the two wheels
towards the center of the curve turn slower than the outer two. For this same
reason, a differential is used in virtually all roadgoing vehicles.
If a fault develops in any part of the ABS, a warning light will usually be
illuminated on the vehicle instrument panel, and the ABS will be disabled
until the fault is rectified.
Modern ABS applies individual brake pressure to all four wheels through a
control system of hub-mounted sensors and a dedicated micro-controller.
ABS is offered or comes standard on most road vehicles produced today and
is the foundation for electronic stability control systems, which are rapidly
1.5 COMPONENTS
There are four main components of ABS: speed sensors, valves, a pump, and
a controller.
1.5.2 Valves
There is a valve in the brake line of each brake controlled by the ABS. On some
systems, the valve has three positions:
In position one, the valve is open; pressure from the master cylinder is
passed right through to the brake.
In position two, the valve blocks the line, isolating that brake from the master
cylinder. This prevents the pressure from rising further should the driver push
the brake pedal harder.
In position three, the valve releases some of the pressure from the brake.
The majority of problems with the valve system occur due to clogged valves. When
a valve is clogged it is unable to open, close, or change position. An inoperable
valve will prevent the system from modulating the valves and controlling pressure
supplied to the brakes.
1.5.3 Pump
The pump in the ABS is used to restore the pressure to the hydraulic brakes after
the valves have released it. A signal from the controller will release the valve at the
detection of wheel slip. After a valve release the pressure supplied from the user,
the pump is used to restore a desired amount of pressure to the braking system.
The controller will modulate the pumps status in order to provide the desired
amount of pressure and reduce slipping.
1.5.4 Controller
The controller is an ECU type unit in the car which receives information from each
individual wheel speed sensor, in turn if a wheel loses traction the signal is sent to
the controller, the controller will then limit the brake force (EBD) and activate the
ABS modulator which actuates the braking valves on and off.
1.6 USES
There are many different variations and control algorithms for use in ABS. One of
the simpler systems works as follows:
1. The controller monitors the speed sensors at all times. It is looking for
decelerations in the wheel that are out of the ordinary. Right before a wheel
locks up, it will experience a rapid deceleration. If left unchecked, the wheel
would stop much more quickly than any car could. It might take a car five
seconds to stop from 60 mph (96.6 km/h) under ideal conditions, but a wheel
that locks up could stop spinning in less than a second.
2. The ABS controller knows that such a rapid deceleration is impossible, so it
reduces the pressure to that brake until it sees an acceleration, then it
increases the pressure until it sees the deceleration again. It can do this very
quickly, before the tire can actually significantly change speed. The result is
that the tire slows down at the same rate as the car, with the brakes keeping
the tires very near the point at which they will start to lock up. This gives the
system maximum braking power.
3. This replaces the need to manually pump the brakes while driving on a
slippery or a low traction surface, allowing to steer even in the most
emergency braking conditions.
4. When the ABS is in operation the driver will feel a pulsing in the brake pedal;
this comes from the rapid opening and closing of the valves. This pulsing also
tells the driver that the ABS has been triggered. Some ABS systems can cycle
up to 16 times per second.
This scheme, commonly found on pickup trucks with four-wheel ABS, has a speed
sensor and a valve for each of the front wheels, with one valve and one sensor for
both rear wheels. The speed sensor for the rear wheels is located in the rear axle.
This system provides individual control of the front wheels, so they can both achieve
maximum braking force. The rear wheels, however, are monitored together; they
both have to start to lock up before the ABS will activate on the rear. With this
system, it is possible that one of the rear wheels will lock during a stop, reducing
brake effectiveness. This system is easy to identify, as there are no individual speed
sensors for the rear wheels.
1.8 EFFECTIVENESS
A 2004 Australian study by Monash University Accident Research Centre found that
ABS:
On high-traction surfaces such as bitumen, or concrete, many (though not all) ABSequipped cars are able to attain braking distances better (i.e. shorter) than those
that would be possible without the benefit of ABS. In real world conditions, even an
alert and experienced driver without ABS would find it difficult to match or improve
on the performance of a typical driver with a modern ABS-equipped vehicle. ABS
that ABS would take care of them, while the non-ABS drivers drove more carefully
since ABS would not be there to help in case of a dangerous situation.
The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety released a study in 2010 that found
motorcycles with ABS 37% less likely to be involved in a fatal crash than models
without ABS.