366 research outputs found

    Double-loop sliding mode control of reentry hypersonic vehicle with RCS

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    In order to solve the problem of insufficient aerodynamic moment caused by thin air in the re-entry stage of hypersonic vehicle, this paper establishes an attitude angle model of hypersonic vehicle with reaction control system (RCS), and derives its affine linear model to decoupled the internal and external loop. According to the dead zone and saturation characteristics of RCS thruster, a control method to convert continuous moment into discrete switching instruction using pulse width modulation (PWM) is proposed. Since the number of thrusters is usually redundant, the installation matrix of thrusters in the body coordinate is established, and the command moment is coordinately distributed to the individual thrusters. Then a double-loop sliding mode controller (DSMC) is designed to achieve attitude stability and trajectory tracking. Finally, the simulation results show that DSMC has higher maneuverability, fewer thruster switches and stronger robustness to interference

    Design of Flight Control Systems for a Hypersonic Aircraft Using sliding-PID Control

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    The paper presents the application of sliding-PID control to the design of robust flight control system for a hypersonic aircraft. The proposed controller uses an approach that combines the high-order PID controller with high-order sliding mode (HOSM) control. The PID uses high-order time-derivative (HOTD) function of the sliding mode variable while the HOSM uses the signum function of the HOTD function. HOTD is built using the relative degree nonlinear dynamics of multivariable systems driven by affine control inputs. A displacement autopilot is designed for pitch control of an air-breathing hypersonic vehicle model. Numerical simulation demonstrates the effectiveness of the proposed controller and shows its advantages as compared to the quasi-homogenous HOSM controller

    Observer-Based Nonlinear Dynamic Inversion Adaptive Control with State Constraints

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    Hypersonic vehicle research and development has grown recently in the aerospace industry due to the powerful potential of operating a vehicle that flies at substantially higher speeds than typical aircraft. From a guidance, navigation and control perspective, hypersonic vehicles are particularly interesting due both to inherent vehicle complexities as well as practical concerns that only arise at high Mach numbers. Challenges inherent to the vehicle include nonlinearities, a wide range of operating conditions, high elasticity, high temperatures and parametric uncertainty. Although these challenges have by no means fully been explored in the literature, in the realm of control theory, they are somewhat common. Hypersonic vehicle control is difficult however, because in addition to these more traditional complexities a control designer must also deal with problems very specific to flying at high speeds such as: inlet unstart, overcoming sensing deficiencies at high speeds and creating an implementable digital control framework for a plant with extremely fast dynamics. This dissertation develops three novel theoretical approaches for addressing these challenges through advances in the nonlinear dynamic inversion adaptive control technique. Although hypersonic vehicle control is the motivation and often the application that the control algorithms in this dissertation are tested on, several of the theoretical developments apply to a general class of nonlinear continuous time systems. First, in order to address the problem of inlet unstart, two state constraint mechanisms which integrate into the nonlinear dynamic inversion adaptive control framework are presented. These state constraining control laws require full state feedback and are capable of restricting the outputs of nonlinear systems containing parameter uncertainty to specific regions of the state-space. The first state constraint mechanism achieves this objective using sliding mode control and the second uses bounding functions to smoothly adjust the control and adaptive laws and drive the states toward the origin when constraints are approached. Stability is proven using Lyapunov analysis and these techniques are demonstrated in a nonlinear simulation of a hypersonic vehicle. Second, an observer-based feedback controller is developed that allows for a nonlinear system to track a reference trajectory with bounded errors and without measuring multiple states. Again, the technique used is nonlinear dynamic inversion adaptive control, but because of uncertainty in the system state, it is not assumed that the nonlinear control effectiveness matrix can be canceled perfectly. A nonlinear observer is implemented to estimate the values of the unknown states. This observer allows for the closed-loop stability of the system to be proven through Lyapunov analysis. It is shown that parametric uncertainty can successfully be accounted for using an adaptive mechanism and that all tracking and estimation errors are uniformly ultimately bounded. Finally, a sampled-data nonlinear dynamic inversion adaptive control architecture is introduced. Despite the prevalence of digital controllers in practice, a nonlinear dynamic inversion adaptive control scheme in a sampled-data setting has not previously been developed. The method presented in this dissertation has the capability of extending the benefits of nonlinear dynamic inversion adaptive control - robust control of nonlinear systems with respect to model uncertainty - to more practical platforms

    Adaptive fault-tolerant attitude tracking control for hypersonic vehicle with unknown inertial matrix and states constraints

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    This paper proposes an adaptive fault-tolerant control (FTC) method for hypersonic vehicle (HSV) with unexpected centroid shift, actuator fault, time-varying full state constraints, and input saturation. The occurrence of unexpected centroid shift has three main effects on the HSV system, which are system uncertainties, eccentric moments, and variation of input matrix. In order to ensure the time-varying state constraints, a novel attitude state constraint control strategy, to keep the safe flight of HSV, is technically proposed by a time-varying state constraint function (TVSCF). A unified controller is designed to handle the time-varying state constraints according to the proposed TVSCF. Then, the constrained HSV system can be transformed into a novel free-constrained system based on the TVSCF. For the variation of system input matrix, input saturation and actuator fault, a special Nussbaum-type function is designed to compensate for those time-varying nonlinear terms. Additionally, the auxiliary systems is designed to compensate the constraint of system control inputs. Then, it is proved that the proposed control scheme can guarantee the boundedness of all closed-loop signals based on the Lyapunov stability theory. At last, the simulation results are provided to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed fault-tolerant control scheme.</p

    Incremental twisting fault tolerant control for hypersonic vehicles with partial model knowledge

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    A passive fault tolerant control scheme is proposed for the full reentry trajectory tracking of a hypersonic vehicle in the presence of modelling uncertainties, external disturbances, and actuator faults. To achieve this goal, the attitude error dynamics with relative degree two is formulated first by ignoring the nonlinearities induced by the translational motions. Then, a multivariable twisting controller is developed as a benchmark to ensure the precise tracking task. Theoretical analysis with the Lyapunov method proves that the attitude tracking error and its first-order derivative can simultaneously converge to the origin exponentially. To depend less on the model knowledge and reduce the system uncertainties, an incremental twisting fault tolerant controller is derived based on the incremental nonlinear dynamic inversion control and the predesigned twisting controller. Notably, the proposed controller is user friendly in that only fixed gains and partial model knowledge are required

    Investigations of Model-Free Sliding Mode Control Algorithms including Application to Autonomous Quadrotor Flight

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    Sliding mode control is a robust nonlinear control algorithm that has been used to implement tracking controllers for unmanned aircraft systems that are robust to modeling uncertainty and exogenous disturbances, thereby providing excellent performance for autonomous operation. A significant advance in the application of sliding mode control for unmanned aircraft systems would be adaptation of a model-free sliding mode control algorithm, since the most complex and time-consuming aspect of implementation of sliding mode control is the derivation of the control law with incorporation of the system model, a process required to be performed for each individual application of sliding mode control. The performance of four different model-free sliding mode control algorithms was compared in simulation using a variety of aerial system models and real-world disturbances (e.g. the effects of discretization and state estimation). The two best performing algorithms were shown to exhibit very similar behavior. These two algorithms were implemented on a quadrotor (both in simulation and using real-world hardware) and the performance was compared to a traditional PID-based controller using the same state estimation algorithm and control setup. Simulation results show the model-free sliding mode control algorithms exhibit similar performance to PID controllers without the tedious tuning process. Comparison between the two model-free sliding mode control algorithms showed very similar performance as measured by the quadratic means of tracking errors. Flight testing showed that while a model-free sliding mode control algorithm is capable of controlling realworld hardware, further characterization and significant improvements are required before it is a viable alternative to conventional control algorithms. Large tracking errors were observed for both the model-free sliding mode control and PID based flight controllers and the performance was characterized as unacceptable for most applications. The poor performance of both controllers suggests tracking errors could be attributed to errors in state estimation, which effectively introduce unknown dynamics into the feedback loop. Further testing with improved state estimation would allow for more conclusions to be drawn about the performance characteristics of the model-free sliding mode control algorithms

    Terminal Sliding Mode Control with Unidirectional Auxiliary Surfaces for Hypersonic Vehicles Based on Adaptive Disturbance Observer

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    A novel flight control scheme is proposed using the terminal sliding mode technique, unidirectional auxiliary surfaces and the disturbance observer model. These proposed dynamic attitude control systems can improve control performance of hypersonic vehicles despite uncertainties and external disturbances. The terminal attractor is employed to improve the convergence rate associated with the critical damping characteristics problem noted in short-period motions of hypersonic vehicles. The proposed robust attitude control scheme uses a dynamic terminal sliding mode with unidirectional auxiliary surfaces. The nonlinear disturbance observer is designed to estimate system uncertainties and external disturbances. The output of the disturbance observer aids the robust adaptive control scheme and improves robust attitude control performance. Finally, simulation results are presented to illustrate the effectiveness of the proposed terminal sliding mode with unidirectional auxiliary surfaces

    Adaptive Finite-Time Control for a Flexible Hypersonic Vehicle with Actuator Fault

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    The problem of robust fault-tolerant tracking control is investigated. Simulation on the longitudinal model of a flexible air-breathing hypersonic vehicle (FAHV) with actuator faults and uncertainties is conducted. In order to guarantee that the velocity and altitude track their desired commands in finite time with the partial loss of actuator effectiveness, an adaptive fault-tolerant control strategy is presented based on practical finite-time sliding mode method. The adaptive update laws are used to estimate the upper bound of uncertainties and the minimum value of actuator efficiency factor. Finally, simulation results show that the proposed control strategy is effective in rejecting uncertainties even in the presence of actuator faults

    Observer-Based Nonlinear Dynamic Inversion Adaptive Control with State Constraints

    Get PDF
    Hypersonic vehicle research and development has grown recently in the aerospace industry due to the powerful potential of operating a vehicle that flies at substantially higher speeds than typical aircraft. From a guidance, navigation and control perspective, hypersonic vehicles are particularly interesting due both to inherent vehicle complexities as well as practical concerns that only arise at high Mach numbers. Challenges inherent to the vehicle include nonlinearities, a wide range of operating conditions, high elasticity, high temperatures and parametric uncertainty. Although these challenges have by no means fully been explored in the literature, in the realm of control theory, they are somewhat common. Hypersonic vehicle control is difficult however, because in addition to these more traditional complexities a control designer must also deal with problems very specific to flying at high speeds such as: inlet unstart, overcoming sensing deficiencies at high speeds and creating an implementable digital control framework for a plant with extremely fast dynamics. This dissertation develops three novel theoretical approaches for addressing these challenges through advances in the nonlinear dynamic inversion adaptive control technique. Although hypersonic vehicle control is the motivation and often the application that the control algorithms in this dissertation are tested on, several of the theoretical developments apply to a general class of nonlinear continuous time systems. First, in order to address the problem of inlet unstart, two state constraint mechanisms which integrate into the nonlinear dynamic inversion adaptive control framework are presented. These state constraining control laws require full state feedback and are capable of restricting the outputs of nonlinear systems containing parameter uncertainty to specific regions of the state-space. The first state constraint mechanism achieves this objective using sliding mode control and the second uses bounding functions to smoothly adjust the control and adaptive laws and drive the states toward the origin when constraints are approached. Stability is proven using Lyapunov analysis and these techniques are demonstrated in a nonlinear simulation of a hypersonic vehicle. Second, an observer-based feedback controller is developed that allows for a nonlinear system to track a reference trajectory with bounded errors and without measuring multiple states. Again, the technique used is nonlinear dynamic inversion adaptive control, but because of uncertainty in the system state, it is not assumed that the nonlinear control effectiveness matrix can be canceled perfectly. A nonlinear observer is implemented to estimate the values of the unknown states. This observer allows for the closed-loop stability of the system to be proven through Lyapunov analysis. It is shown that parametric uncertainty can successfully be accounted for using an adaptive mechanism and that all tracking and estimation errors are uniformly ultimately bounded. Finally, a sampled-data nonlinear dynamic inversion adaptive control architecture is introduced. Despite the prevalence of digital controllers in practice, a nonlinear dynamic inversion adaptive control scheme in a sampled-data setting has not previously been developed. The method presented in this dissertation has the capability of extending the benefits of nonlinear dynamic inversion adaptive control - robust control of nonlinear systems with respect to model uncertainty - to more practical platforms

    Adaptive Multivariable Integral TSMC of a Hypersonic Gliding Vehicle with Actuator Faults and Model Uncertainties

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    This paper presents a fault-tolerant control (FTC) strategy for a hypersonic gliding vehicle (HGV) subject to actuator malfunctions and model uncertainties. The control-oriented model of the HGV is estabilished according to the HGV kinematic and aerodynamic models. A single-loop design for HGV FTC under actuator faults is subsequently developed, where newly developed multivariable integral terminal sliding mode control (TSMC) and adaptive techniques are integrated. The multivariable integral TSMC is capable of ensuring the finite-time stability of the closed-loop system in the presence of actuator malfunctions and model uncertainties, while the adaptive laws are employed to tune the control parameters in response to the HGV status. Simulation studies based on a six degree-of-freedom (DOF) nonlinear model of the HGV are illustrated to highlight the effectiveness of the developed FTC scheme
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