This work addresses the problem of path tracking control of a suspended load
using a tilt-rotor UAV. The main challenge in controlling this kind of system
arises from the dynamic behavior imposed by the load, which is usually coupled
to the UAV by means of a rope, adding unactuated degrees of freedom to the
whole system. Furthermore, to perform the load transportation it is often
needed the knowledge of the load position to accomplish the task. Since
available sensors are commonly embedded in the mobile platform, information on
the load position may not be directly available. To solve this problem in this
work, initially, the kinematics of the multi-body mechanical system are
formulated from the load's perspective, from which a detailed dynamic model is
derived using the Euler-Lagrange approach, yielding a highly coupled, nonlinear
state-space representation of the system, affine in the inputs, with the load's
position and orientation directly represented by state variables. A zonotopic
state estimator is proposed to solve the problem of estimating the load
position and orientation, which is formulated based on sensors located at the
aircraft, with different sampling times, and unknown-but-bounded measurement
noise. To solve the path tracking problem, a discrete-time mixed
H2β/Hββ controller with pole-placement constraints
is designed with guaranteed time-response properties and robust to unmodeled
dynamics, parametric uncertainties, and external disturbances. Results from
numerical experiments, performed in a platform based on the Gazebo simulator
and on a Computer Aided Design (CAD) model of the system, are presented to
corroborate the performance of the zonotopic state estimator along with the
designed controller