Simulation & Validation

MIL / SIL / HIL / VIL Solutions

ATS Group supports model-based development and controller validation through a complete workflow that moves from virtual simulation to hardware-connected testing and full vehicle-level verification.

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Automotive simulation and validation systems

From model testing to real vehicle validation

MIL, SIL, HIL, and VIL are widely used verification stages in automotive and control-system engineering. Together they help teams develop logic earlier, reduce integration risks, and validate controller behaviour before and after hardware is introduced.

ATS can position this page for OEMs, Tier suppliers, and validation teams that need a structured path from software models to hardware-in-loop benches and finally complete vehicle-level testing.

Four Core Solution Stages Covered on This Page

MIL

Model-in-the-loop validation for early control strategy development, algorithm checks, and requirement-level behaviour review.

SIL

Software-in-the-loop testing to confirm compiled code behaviour against expected logic before connecting real hardware.

HIL

Hardware-in-the-loop systems for ECU interaction, real-time stimulation, fault insertion, and controller verification under realistic signals.

Model in the loop development

MIL Solutions

Model-in-the-loop is typically the first validation stage where control logic is checked inside a simulation environment. Engineering teams can verify algorithms, edge cases, and plant interactions before implementation risk becomes expensive.

On the ATS page, MIL can be positioned as the foundation for faster architecture validation, cleaner requirement mapping, and earlier decision-making during product development.

SIL Solutions

Software-in-the-loop extends the process by testing real software code in a simulated environment. This helps teams compare intended model behaviour with actual implementation and identify mismatches before ECU-level integration starts.

ATS can describe SIL as a practical bridge between algorithm design and embedded software verification, especially for teams targeting faster release cycles and more repeatable regression testing.

Software in the loop validation
Hardware in the loop test bench

HIL Solutions

Hardware-in-the-loop brings real controllers into the loop while the rest of the vehicle or plant remains simulated in real time. This stage is critical for ECU validation, signal stimulation, fault scenarios, and hardware-software interaction under controlled conditions.

Reference product naming points toward systems such as MXsteerHiL and MXbrakeHiL, which fit steering and braking controller development where repeatability and safe closed-loop evaluation are essential.

One development chain that starts with virtual models and scales to real-time hardware validation.

See Vehicle-Level Validation

VIL Solutions

Vehicle-in-the-loop extends the process into near-real or real vehicle validation, where control logic, hardware, and environmental interactions are checked with a much higher system-level fidelity. This stage supports final tuning, scenario execution, and confidence before deployment.

ATS can use VIL to represent the last major verification layer where model insights and HIL learnings are carried into complete vehicle behaviour and application-focused testing.

Vehicle in the loop testing

Key HIL-focused solution examples

ST

MXsteerHiL

Suitable for steering controller development, actuator stimulation, and repeatable closed-loop steering validation on HIL benches.

BR

MXbrakeHiL

Built around brake-system logic validation, controller response checks, and safer pre-vehicle verification of braking behaviour.

RT

Real-Time Testing

Supports deterministic simulation, signal exchange, and fault scenario execution for robust hardware-software interaction studies.

VC

Validation Chain

Connects MIL, SIL, HIL, and VIL into one engineering narrative that improves traceability and reduces late-stage issues.

FAQs

1. What does MIL stand for?

MIL stands for Model-in-the-Loop, where control strategies are first validated in a simulation environment before code or hardware integration.

2. Why is SIL important after MIL?

SIL verifies whether the implemented software behaves like the original model, helping teams catch logic mismatches before hardware testing begins.

3. What is the main purpose of HIL?

HIL allows real controllers to interact with a real-time simulated plant, enabling safer and more repeatable verification of ECU behaviour.

4. What does VIL add to the process?

VIL moves validation closer to full vehicle behaviour, giving teams confidence that model and hardware learnings still hold at system level.

5. Which ATS examples fit this page best?

MXsteerHiL and MXbrakeHiL are strong examples for steering and braking HIL validation, supported by a broader MIL to VIL engineering workflow.

Need support for model-based development, HIL benches, or vehicle-level validation?

ATS Group can help structure MIL, SIL, HIL, and VIL workflows for steering, braking, and controller validation programs.

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