1,048 research outputs found

    Fault tolerant longitudinal aircraft control using non-linear integral sliding mode

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    Copyright © 2014 Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET)This study proposes a novel non-linear fault tolerant scheme for longitudinal control of an aircraft system, comprising an integral sliding mode control allocation scheme and a backstepping structure. In fault free conditions, the closed loop system is governed by the backstepping controller and the integral sliding mode control allocation scheme only influences the performance if faults/failures occur in the primary control surfaces. In this situation, the allocation scheme redistributes the control signals to the secondary control surfaces and the scheme is able to tolerate total failures in the primary actuator. A backstepping scheme taken from the existing literature is designed for flight path angle tracking (based on the non-linear equations of motion) and this is used as the underlying baseline controller in nominal conditions. The efficacy of the scheme is demonstrated using a high-fidelity aircraft benchmark model. Excellent results are obtained in the presence of plant/model uncertainty in both fault free and faulty conditions

    A survey on fractional order control techniques for unmanned aerial and ground vehicles

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    In recent years, numerous applications of science and engineering for modeling and control of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs) systems based on fractional calculus have been realized. The extra fractional order derivative terms allow to optimizing the performance of the systems. The review presented in this paper focuses on the control problems of the UAVs and UGVs that have been addressed by the fractional order techniques over the last decade

    A fault tolerant direct control allocation scheme with integral sliding modes

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    PublishedJournal Article© by Mirza Tariq Hamayun 2015. In this paper, integral sliding mode control ideas are combined with direct control allocation in order to create a fault tolerant control scheme. Traditional integral sliding mode control can directly handle actuator faults; however, it cannot do so with actuator failures. Therefore, a mechanism needs to be adopted to distribute the control effort amongst the remaining functioning actuators in cases of faults or failures, so that an acceptable level of closed-loop performance can be retained. This paper considers the possibility of introducing fault tolerance even if fault or failure information is not provided to the control strategy. To demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed scheme, a high fidelity nonlinear model of a large civil aircraft is considered in the simulations in the presence of wind, gusts and sensor noise.This paper was partially funded by the Deanship of Scientific Research (DSR), King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, under the grant no. Gr/33/5. The first and the last author, therefore, acknowledge with thanks the DSR financial support

    A review of convex approaches for control, observation and safety of linear parameter varying and Takagi-Sugeno systems

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    This paper provides a review about the concept of convex systems based on Takagi-Sugeno, linear parameter varying (LPV) and quasi-LPV modeling. These paradigms are capable of hiding the nonlinearities by means of an equivalent description which uses a set of linear models interpolated by appropriately defined weighing functions. Convex systems have become very popular since they allow applying extended linear techniques based on linear matrix inequalities (LMIs) to complex nonlinear systems. This survey aims at providing the reader with a significant overview of the existing LMI-based techniques for convex systems in the fields of control, observation and safety. Firstly, a detailed review of stability, feedback, tracking and model predictive control (MPC) convex controllers is considered. Secondly, the problem of state estimation is addressed through the design of proportional, proportional-integral, unknown input and descriptor observers. Finally, safety of convex systems is discussed by describing popular techniques for fault diagnosis and fault tolerant control (FTC).Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version

    Integral sliding mode fault tolerant control allocation for a class of affine nonlinear system

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.This paper develops novel fault tolerant integral sliding mode control allocation schemes for a class of over-actuated affine nonlinear system. The proposed schemes rely on an existing baseline controller and the objective is to retain the nominal (fault-free) closed-loop performance in the face of actuator faults/failures by effectively utilizing actuator redundancy. The online control allocation reroutes the control effort to the healthy actuators using knowledge of the actuator effectiveness level estimates. One of the proposed schemes is tested in simulation using a well known high fidelity model of a large civil transport aircraft (B747) from the literature. Good simulation results show the efficacy of the scheme

    Sliding Mode Propulsion Control Tests on a Motion Flight Simulator

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    This paper describes a fault-tolerant sliding-mode control allocation scheme capable of coping with the loss of all control surfaces resulting from a failure of the hydraulics system, during which time the scheme only uses the engines to control the aircraft. The paper presents tests of the scheme implemented on a six-degree-of-freedom motion research flight simulator at Delft University of Technology, using a realistic maneuver involving an emergency return to a near-landing condition on a runway in response to the failure. The simulator results show that not only does the controller provide high tracking performance during nominal fault-free conditions, this performance is also maintained after the total loss of all control surfaces. This shows the capability of the proposed sliding-mode control allocation scheme to achieve and maintain desired performance levels using only propulsion by redistributing the control signals to the engines when failures occur

    Real-time implementation of an ISM Fault Tolerant Control scheme for LPV plants

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    Copyright © 2014 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.This paper proposes a fault tolerant control scheme for linear parameter varying systems based on integral sliding modes and control allocation, and describes the implementation and evaluation of the controllers on a 6 degree-of-freedom research flight simulator called SIMONA. The fault tolerant control scheme is developed using a linear parameter varying approach to extend ideas previously developed for linear time invariant systems, in order to cover a wide range of operating conditions. The scheme benefits from the combination of the inherent robustness properties of integral sliding modes (to ensure sliding occurs throughout the simulation) and control allocation, which has the ability to redistribute control signals to all available actuators in the event of faults/failures

    Development and Evaluation of an Integral Sliding Mode Fault Tolerant Control Scheme on the RECONFIGURE Benchmark

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Wiley via the DOI in this record.This paper describes the development, application and evaluation of a linear parameter-varying integral sliding mode control allocation scheme to the RECONFIGURE benchmark model to deal with an actuator failure/fault scenario. The proposed scheme has the capability to maintain close to nominal (fault free) load factor control performance in the face of elevator failures/faults, by including a retro-fitted integral sliding mode term and then re-routing (via control allocation) the augmented control signal to healthy elevators without reconfiguring the baseline controller. In order to mitigate any chattering appearing in the elevator demands, the retro-fitted signal is based on a super-twisting sliding mode structure. This produces a control signal which is continuous and does not have the discontinuous switching nature of traditional sliding mode schemes. The scheme is evaluated using an industrial Functional Engineering Simulator developed as part of the RECONFIGURE project. Monte-Carlo campaign results are shown to demonstrate the performance of the proposed scheme.The work in this paper is supported by EU-FP7 Grant (FP7-AAT-2012-314544): RECONFIGUR

    Fault tolerant sliding mode control design with piloted simulator evaluation

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    Copyright © 2008 American Institute of Aeronautics and AstronauticsThis paper considers sliding mode allocation schemes for fault tolerant control. The schemes allow redistribution of the control signals to the remaining functioning actuators when a fault or failure occurs. The paper analyzes the schemes and determines conditions under which closed–loop stability is retained for a certain class of faults and failures. It is shown that faults and even certain total actuator failures can be handled directly without reconfiguring the controller. The results obtained from implementing the controllers on the SIMONA research flight simulator, configured to represent a B747 aircraft, show good performance in both nominal and failure scenarios even in wind and gust conditions
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