Abstract

This article presents an innovative control architecture for tilt-rotor quadcopters with H-configuration transporting unknown, sling payloads. This control architecture leverages on a thorough analysis of the aircraft's equation of motion, which reveals gyroscopic effects that were not fully characterized and were disregarded while synthesizing control algorithms in prior publications. Furthermore, the proposed control architecture employs barrier Lyapunov functions and a novel robust model reference adaptive control law to guarantee a priori user-defined constraints on both the trajectory tracking error and the control input, despite poor information on the aircraft's inertial properties and the presence of unknown, unsteady payloads. Flight tests involving a quadcopter pulling an unmodeled cart by means of a thin rope of unknown length, which is slack at the beginning of the mission, verify the effectiveness of the theoretical results.

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