Distributed Attack-Resilient Platooning Against False Data Injection

Journal Article (2026)
Author(s)

Lorenzo Lyons (TU Delft - Mechanical Engineering)

Manuel Boldrer (Czech Technical University)

Laura Ferranti (TU Delft - Mechanical Engineering)

Research Group
Learning & Autonomous Control
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1109/TVT.2025.3614452 Final published version
More Info
expand_more
Publication Year
2026
Language
English
Research Group
Learning & Autonomous Control
Journal title
IEEE Transactions on Vehicular Technology
Issue number
3
Volume number
75
Pages (from-to)
3888-3903
Downloads counter
27
Reuse Rights

Other than for strictly personal use, it is not permitted to download, forward or distribute the text or part of it, without the consent of the author(s) and/or copyright holder(s), unless the work is under an open content license such as Creative Commons.

Abstract

This paper presents a novel distributed vehicle platooning control and coordination strategy. We propose a distributed predecessor-follower CACC scheme that allows to choose an arbitrarily small inter-vehicle distance while guaranteeing no rear-end collisions occur, even in the presence of undetected cyber-attacks on the communication channels such as false data injection. The safety guarantees of the CACC policy are derived by combining a sensor-based ACC policy that explicitly accounts for actuator saturation, and a communication-based predictive term that has state-dependent limits on its control authority, thus containing the effects of an unreliable communication channel. An undetected attack may still however be able to degrade platooning performance. To mitigate it, we propose a tailored Kalman observer-based attack detection algorithm that initially triggers a switch from the CACC policy to the ACC policy. Subsequently, by relying on a high-level coordinator, our strategy allows to isolate a compromised vehicle from the platoon formation by reconfiguring the platoon topology itself. The coordinator can also handle merging and splitting requests. We compare our algorithm in an extensive simulation study against a state of the art distributed MPC scheme and a robust control scheme. We additionally extensively test our full method in practice on a real system, a team of scaled-down car-like robots. Furthermore, we share the code to run both the simulations and robotic experiments.

Files

Distributed_Attack-Resilient_P... (pdf)
(pdf | 1.74 Mb)
- Embargo expired in 25-03-2026
Taverne