Abstract

This paper investigates the flight dynamics of the aircraft with wing asymmetric damage and the fault-tolerant control problem to improve the stability and flight quality of damaged aircraft. A high-fidelity wing asymmetric damaged aircraft nonlinear model is developed, as well as the impact of wing asymmetric damage on the physical and aerodynamic properties of the aircraft is also analyzed. The trim strategies for damaged aircraft are investigated to achieve a rapid estimation of trim states after damage occurs. This paper presents a robust cascaded nonlinear fault-tolerant control framework that integrates the incremental nonlinear dynamic inversion control with improved piecewise-constant-based nonlinear L1 adaptive control for the stability control to enhance the stability and tracking performance of the damaged aircraft. Theoretical analysis proves that the presented fault-control structure is robust to disturbances and can decouple rapidity and robustness while guaranteeing steady-state and transient performance. Finally, the hardware-in-the-loop flight control experiment platform is developed to validate the cascaded nonlinear fault-tolerant controller. In the experiment, the proposed controller is verified under wing asymmetric damage and compared with existing methods. Experimental results show that the proposed fault-tolerant control is able to overcome wing asymmetric damage and significantly improve the tracking performance of the damaged aircraft even with 27.2% of the severe damage to the left-wing.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call