5 research outputs found
An Experimentally Validated Model of the Propeller Force Accounting for Cross Influences on Multi-Rotor Aerial Systems
In this paper, we propose a model for the thrust coefficient of propellers that can take into account cross-influence between adjacent propellers. The aerodynamic interaction between propellers in multirotor aerial vehicles reduces the thrust they can produce. The influence between propellers depends on their relative positioning and orientation, which are taken into account by the proposed model. It is validated on measurements collected by a force sensor mounted on a propeller for different configurations of the adjacent propellers in a support structure. In this work, we focus on configurations with small relative orientations. Results show that the proposed model outperforms the traditional constant model in terms of thrust prediction on the data we collected, and it performs better than other models with fewer parameters, being the only one with less than 10% maximum percentage error
Modelling, Analysis and Control of OmniMorph: an Omnidirectional Morphing Multi-rotor UAV
This paper introduces for the first time the design, modelling, and control
of a novel morphing multi-rotor Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) that we call the
OmniMorph. The morphing ability allows the selection of the configuration that
optimizes energy consumption while ensuring the needed maneuverability for the
required task. The most energy-efficient uni-directional thrust (UDT)
configuration can be used, e.g., during standard point-to-point displacements.
Fully-actuated (FA) and omnidirectional (OD) configurations can be instead used
for full pose tracking, such as, e.g., constant attitude horizontal motions and
full rotations on the spot, and for full wrench 6D interaction control and 6D
disturbance rejection. Morphing is obtained using a single servomotor, allowing
possible minimization of weight, costs, and maintenance complexity. The
actuation properties are studied, and an optimal controller that compromises
between performance and control effort is proposed and validated in realistic
simulations
Modelling, Analysis, and Control of OmniMorph: an Omnidirectional Morphing Multi-rotor UAV
This paper introduces for the first time the design, modelling, and control of a novel morphing multi-rotor Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) that we call the OmniMorph. The morphing ability allows the selection of the configuration that optimizes energy consumption while ensuring the needed maneuverability for the required task. The most energy-efficient uni-directional thrust (UDT) configuration can be used, e.g., during standard point-to-point displacements. Fully-actuated (FA) and omnidirectional (OD) configurations can be instead used for full pose tracking, such as, e.g., constant attitude horizontal motions and full rotations on the spot, and for full wrench 6D interaction control and 6D disturbance rejection. Morphing is obtained using a single servomotor, allowing possible minimization of weight, costs, and maintenance complexity. The actuation properties are studied, and an optimal controller that compromises between performance and control effort is proposed and validated in realistic simulations. Preliminary tests on the prototype are presented to assess the propellers’ mutual aerodynamic interference.</p