16 research outputs found
Robust control of longitudinal flight with handling qualities constraints
Classical flight control systems are still widely used
in industry because of acquired experience and good understanding of their structure. Nevertheless, with more stringent constraints, it becomes difficult to easily fulfill all the criteria with this classical control laws. This article aims at showing that this problem can be solved by first designing a high order controller satisfying all the constraints, then by reducing and structuring it in order to make it look like a classical controller. Firstly, an H∞ synthesis is performed in order to get a robust controller versus mass and center of gravity variations, which will satisfy the handling qualities; then it will be reduced by using robust modal control techniques
Robust scheduled control of longitudinal flight with handling quality satisfaction
Classic flight control systems are still widely used in the industry because of acquired experience and good understanding of their structure. Nevertheless, with more stringent constraints, it becomes difficult to easily fulfil all the criteria with these classic control laws.
On the other hand, modern methods can handle many constraints but fail to produce low order controllers. The following methodology proposed in this paper addresses both classic and modern flight control issues, to offer a solution that leverages the strengths of both approaches. First, an H∞ synthesis is performed in order to get controllers which satisfy handling qualities and are robust withrespect to mass and centre of gravity variations. These controllers are then reduced and structured by using robust modal control techniques. In conclusion, a self-scheduling technique is described that will schedule these controllers over the entire flight envelope
Longitudinal flight control design with handling quality requirements
This work presents a method for selecting the gain parameters of a C* control law for an aircraft’s
longitudinal motion. The design incorporates various handling quality requirements involving modal, time-
and frequency-domain criteria that were fixed by the aircraft manufacturer. After necessary model order-
reductions, the design proceeds in essentially two-step
s: Stability Augmentation System (SAS) loop design
and Control Augmentation System (CAS) loop design. The approach partly relies on the use of guardian
maps to characterize, in each case, the set of gain parameters for which desired handling quality requirements
are satisfied. The approach is applied throughout the full flight envelope of a business jet aircraft and yields
satisfactory results
Gain scheduling with guardian maps for longitudinal flight control
A new approach to gain scheduling of linear controllers is proposed and applied to a longitudinal flight control pro-blem. Traditionally, gain scheduling is done a posteriori by the interpolation of controller gains designed for several operating points or conditions. The method proposed here is based on guardian maps and does not require as many linear controller syntheses as there are design points. Rather, it extends the performance of an initial single controller carried out on an arbitrary operating point to the entire domain while ensuring generalized stability all along the process. The method, which uses a given fixed architecture controller, is successfully applied on the longitudinal flight control of a business jet aircraft