259 research outputs found

    STUDY OF THE MICRO UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLE (MUAV) VERTICAL TAKE-OFF AND LANDING (VTOL) CONTROL SYSTEM

    Get PDF
    A stable Vertical Take-off and Landing Operation (VTOL) capability is very important for Micro Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (MUAV). It will enable the aircraft to conduct operation in such difficult situations. To achieve that, it becomes a main priority to have a suitable and good control system to control the stability of the MUAV's body during take-off and landing operations. The objectives of this project are to study possible methods of controlling the MUAV's VTOL operations, the quad rotor dynamic modeling concept of the MUAV as well as the control allocation for the MUAV's VTOL system. After that, the modeling and simulation processes will be conducted to the selected control allocation. As a first step, the literature review stage which covers the studies from various sources is done to get a proper idea regarding the MUA V and VTOL operation. The modeling and control allocation study is conducted to study the method in conducting modeling processes and control allocation involved for the control system. Along the process, the design methodology has been discussed along with an iterative algorithm derived. All the data, parameters and formulas have been validated during the data analysis and validation stage. After all of information have been gathered and validated, the control system has been modeled and simulated during the final stage of the project. In this stage also, all the characteristics and parameters have been adjusted and perfected to get the desired results. As for the results, the final control system is consist of a set of sensors that will give reading in x, y and z-coordinates. Besides, the self-programmable Microchip picl8f4431 processor also has been selected which the control system coding can be embedded. The selected microchip has the onboard highspeed analog digital (A/D) converter and the power pulse width modulation (PWM) module. The module on the microchip will convert the analog signal from the sensors to the digital signal so that it can be read by the motor driver. The motor driver will equally distribute and balance the power to all four of the MUAV's motors so that it can ensure the MUAV's body remains stable during take-off and landing operations

    Methods of system identification, parameter estimation and optimisation applied to problems of modelling and control in engineering and physiology

    Get PDF
    Mathematical and computer-based models provide the foundation of most methods of engineering design. They are recognised as being especially important in the development of integrated dynamic systems, such as “control-configured” aircraft or in complex robotics applications. These models usually involve combinations of linear or nonlinear ordinary differential equations or difference equations, partial differential equations and algebraic equations. In some cases models may be based on differential algebraic equations. Dynamic models are also important in many other fields of research, including physiology where the highly integrated nature of biological control systems is starting to be more fully understood. Although many models may be developed using physical, chemical, or biological principles in the initial stages, the use of experimentation is important for checking the significance of underlying assumptions or simplifications and also for estimating appropriate sets of parameters. This experimental approach to modelling is also of central importance in establishing the suitability, or otherwise, of a given model for an intended application – the so-called “model validation” problem. System identification, which is the broad term used to describe the processes of experimental modelling, is generally considered to be a mature field and classical methods of identification involve linear discrete-time models within a stochastic framework. The aspects of the research described in this thesis that relate to applications of identification, parameter estimation and optimisation techniques for model development and model validation mainly involve nonlinear continuous time models Experimentally-based models of this kind have been used very successfully in the course of the research described in this thesis very in two areas of physiological research and in a number of different engineering applications. In terms of optimisation problems, the design, experimental tuning and performance evaluation of nonlinear control systems has much in common with the use of optimisation techniques within the model development process and it is therefore helpful to consider these two areas together. The work described in the thesis is strongly applications oriented. Many similarities have been found in applying modelling and control techniques to problems arising in fields that appear very different. For example, the areas of neurophysiology, respiratory gas exchange processes, electro-optic sensor systems, helicopter flight-control, hydro-electric power generation and surface ship or underwater vehicles appear to have little in common. However, closer examination shows that they have many similarities in terms of the types of problem that are presented, both in modelling and in system design. In addition to nonlinear behaviour; most models of these systems involve significant uncertainties or require important simplifications if the model is to be used in a real-time application such as automatic control. One recurring theme, that is important both in the modelling work described and for control applications, is the additional insight that can be gained through the dual use of time-domain and frequency-domain information. One example of this is the importance of coherence information in establishing the existence of linear or nonlinear relationships between variables and this has proved to be valuable in the experimental investigation of neuromuscular systems and in the identification of helicopter models from flight test data. Frequency-domain techniques have also proved useful for the reduction of high-order multi-input multi-output models. Another important theme that has appeared both within the modelling applications and in research on nonlinear control system design methods, relates to the problems of optimisation in cases where the associated response surface has many local optima. Finding the global optimum in practical applications presents major difficulties and much emphasis has been placed on evolutionary methods of optimisation (both genetic algorithms and genetic programming) in providing usable methods for optimisation in design and in complex nonlinear modelling applications that do not involve real-time problems. Another topic, considered both in the context of system modelling and control, is parameter sensitivity analysis and it has been found that insight gained from sensitivity information can be of value not only in the development of system models (e.g. through investigation of model robustness and the design of appropriate test inputs), but also in feedback system design and in controller tuning. A technique has been developed based on sensitivity analysis for the semi-automatic tuning of cascade and feedback controllers for multi-input multi-output feedback control systems. This tuning technique has been applied successfully to several problems. Inverse systems also receive significant attention in the thesis. These systems have provided a basis for theoretical research in the control systems field over the past two decades and some significant applications have been reported, despite the inherent difficulties in the mathematical methods needed for the nonlinear case. Inverse simulation methods, developed initially by others for use in handling-qualities studies for fixed-wing aircraft and helicopters, are shown in the thesis to provide some important potential benefits in control applications compared with classical methods of inversion. New developments in terms of methodology are presented in terms of a novel sensitivity based approach to inverse simulation that has advantages in terms of numerical accuracy and a new search-based optimisation technique based on the Nelder-Mead algorithm that can handle inverse simulation problems involving hard nonlinearities. Engineering applications of inverse simulation are presented, some of which involve helicopter flight control applications while others are concerned with feed-forward controllers for ship steering systems. The methods of search-based optimisation show some important advantages over conventional gradient-based methods, especially in cases where saturation and other nonlinearities are significant. The final discussion section takes the form of a critical evaluation of results obtained using the chosen methods of system identification, parameter estimation and optimisation for the modelling and control applications considered. Areas of success are highlighted and situations are identified where currently available techniques have important limitations. The benefits of an inter-disciplinary and applications-oriented approach to problems of modelling and control are also discussed and the value in terms of cross-fertilisation of ideas resulting from involvement in a wide range of applications is emphasised. Areas for further research are discussed

    STUDY OF THE MICRO UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLE (MUAV) VERTICAL TAKE-OFF AND LANDING (VTOL) CONTROL SYSTEM

    Get PDF
    A stable Vertical Take-off and Landing Operation (VTOL) capability is very important for Micro Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (MUAV). It will enable the aircraft to conduct operation in such difficult situations. To achieve that, it becomes a main priority to have a suitable and good control system to control the stability of the MUAV's body during take-off and landing operations. The objectives of this project are to study possible methods of controlling the MUAV's VTOL operations, the quad rotor dynamic modeling concept of the MUAV as well as the control allocation for the MUAV's VTOL system. After that, the modeling and simulation processes will be conducted to the selected control allocation. As a first step, the literature review stage which covers the studies from various sources is done to get a proper idea regarding the MUA V and VTOL operation. The modeling and control allocation study is conducted to study the method in conducting modeling processes and control allocation involved for the control system. Along the process, the design methodology has been discussed along with an iterative algorithm derived. All the data, parameters and formulas have been validated during the data analysis and validation stage. After all of information have been gathered and validated, the control system has been modeled and simulated during the final stage of the project. In this stage also, all the characteristics and parameters have been adjusted and perfected to get the desired results. As for the results, the final control system is consist of a set of sensors that will give reading in x, y and z-coordinates. Besides, the self-programmable Microchip picl8f4431 processor also has been selected which the control system coding can be embedded. The selected microchip has the onboard highspeed analog digital (A/D) converter and the power pulse width modulation (PWM) module. The module on the microchip will convert the analog signal from the sensors to the digital signal so that it can be read by the motor driver. The motor driver will equally distribute and balance the power to all four of the MUAV's motors so that it can ensure the MUAV's body remains stable during take-off and landing operations

    On the Complete Automation of Vertical Flight Aircraft Ship Landing

    Get PDF
    The current study focuses on developing an autonomous vertical flight aircraft ship landing system by directly automating the established Navy helicopter ship landing procedure. The central idea involves visually tracking a gyro-stabilized horizon bar installed on most Navy ships to approach and land vertically independent of deck motions. This was accomplished through the development of a rotorcraft flight dynamics modeling framework and vision-based control systems as well as conducting simulations and flight tests. The framework, named Texas A&M Rotorcraft Analysis Code (TRAC), was developed as a modular tool that could model any rotorcraft configuration at a low computational cost. A UH-60 helicopter was modeled as a baseline aircraft and validated using the US Army flight test data. A linear quadratic regulator (LQR) controller was utilized to stabilize and control the helicopter during autonomous ship landing simulations. The vision system was developed to obtain the visual information that a pilot perceives during ship approach and landing. It detects the ship at long-distance by utilizing machine/deep learning-based detection and at close range, it utilizes uniquely developed vision algorithms to detect the horizon bar to precisely estimate the aircraft position and orientation relative to the bar. It demonstrated 250 meters of detection range for a 6 x 6 ft sub-scale ship platform, which translates to a range of 17.3 kilometers for a full-scale 50 x 50 ft typical small ship. The distance and attitude estimations were validated using the measurements from an accurate 3D motion capture system (VICON), which demonstrated sub-centimeter and sub-degree accuracy. To control the aircraft based on the perceived visual information, both nonlinear control and deep reinforcement learning control strategies were developed. The nonlinear controller demonstrated robust tracking capability even with 0.5 seconds of time delay and estimation noise. When flight-tested in 5 m/s wind gust, the deep reinforcement learning control demonstrated superior disturbance rejection capability, with 50% reduced drift at a 3 times faster rate compared to conventional control systems. Both vision and control systems were implemented on a quadrotor unmanned aircraft and extensive flight tests were conducted to demonstrate accurate tracking in challenging conditions and safe vertical landing on a translating ship platform with 6 degrees of freedom motions

    Towards MAV Autonomous Flight: A Modeling and Control Approach

    Full text link
    This thesis is about modeling and control of miniature rotary-wing flying vehicles, with a special emphasis on quadrotor and coaxial systems. Mathematical models for simulation and nonlinear control approaches are introduced and subsequently applied to commercial aircrafts: the DraganFlyer and the Hummingbird quadrotors, which have been hardware-modified in order to perform experimental autonomous flying. Furthermore, a first-ever approach for modeling commercial micro coaxial mechanism is presented using a flying-toy called the Micro-mosquito

    Active control of turbulence-induced helicopter vibration

    Get PDF
    Helicopter vibration signatures induced by severe atmospheric turbulence have been shown to differ considerably from nominal, still air vibration. The perturbations of the transmission frequency have significant implications for the design of passive and active vibration alleviation devices, which are generally tuned to the nominal vibration frequency. This thesis investigates the existence of the phenomena in several realistic atmospheric turbulence environments, generated using Computational Fluid Dynamic (CFD) engineering software and assimilated within a high-fidelity rotorcraft simulation, RASCAL. The RASCAL simulation is modified to calculate blade element sampling of the gust, enabling thorough, high frequency analyses of the rotor response. In a final modification, a numerical, integration-based inverse simulation algorithm, GENISA is incorporated and the augmented simulation is henceforth referred to as HISAT. Several implementation issues arise from the symbiosis, principally because of the modelling of variable rotorspeed and lead-lag motion. However, a novel technique for increasing the numerical stability margins is proposed and tested successfully. Two active vibration control schemes, higher harmonic control 'HHC' and individual blade control 'IBC', are then evaluated against a 'worst-case' sharp-edged gust field. The higher harmonic controller demonstrates a worrying lack of robustness, and actually begins to contribute to the vibration levels. Several intuitive modifications to the algorithm are proposed but only disturbance estimation is successful. A new simulation model of coupled blade motion is derived and implemented using MATLAB and is used to design a simple IBC compensator. Following bandwidth problems, a redesign is proposed using H theory which improves the controller performance. Disturbance prediction/estimation is attempted using artificial neural networks to limited success. Overall, the aims and objectives of the research are met

    Intelligent Vision-based Autonomous Ship Landing of VTOL UAVs

    Full text link
    The paper discusses an intelligent vision-based control solution for autonomous tracking and landing of Vertical Take-Off and Landing (VTOL) capable Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) on ships without utilizing GPS signal. The central idea involves automating the Navy helicopter ship landing procedure where the pilot utilizes the ship as the visual reference for long-range tracking; however, refers to a standardized visual cue installed on most Navy ships called the "horizon bar" for the final approach and landing phases. This idea is implemented using a uniquely designed nonlinear controller integrated with machine vision. The vision system utilizes machine learning-based object detection for long-range ship tracking and classical computer vision for the estimation of aircraft relative position and orientation utilizing the horizon bar during the final approach and landing phases. The nonlinear controller operates based on the information estimated by the vision system and has demonstrated robust tracking performance even in the presence of uncertainties. The developed autonomous ship landing system was implemented on a quad-rotor UAV equipped with an onboard camera, and approach and landing were successfully demonstrated on a moving deck, which imitates realistic ship deck motions. Extensive simulations and flight tests were conducted to demonstrate vertical landing safety, tracking capability, and landing accuracy
    • …
    corecore