Abstract

The flight control problem of a flexible air-breathing hypersonic vehicle is presented in the presence of input constraint and aerodynamic uncertainty. A control-oriented model, where aerodynamic uncertainty and the strong couplings between the engine and flight dynamics are included, is derived to reduce the complexity of controller design. The flexible dynamics are viewed as perturbations of the model. They are not taken into consideration at the level of control design, the influence of which is evaluated through simulation. The control-oriented model is decomposed into velocity subsystem and altitude subsystem, which are controlled separately. Then robust adaptive controller is developed for the velocity subsystem, while the controller which combines dynamic surface control and radial basis function neural network is designed for the altitude subsystem. The unknown nonlinear function is approximated by the radial basis function neural network. Minimal-learning parameter technique is utilized to estimate the maximum norm of ideal weight vectors instead of their elements to reduce the computational burden. To handle input constraints, additional systems are constructed to analyze their impact, and the states of the additional systems are employed at the level of control design and stability analysis. Besides, “explosion of terms” problem in the traditional backstepping control is circumvented using a first-order filter at each step. By means of Lyapunov stability theory, it is proved theoretically that the designed control law can assure that tracking error converges to an arbitrarily small neighborhood around zero. Simulations are performed to demonstrate the effectiveness of the presented control scheme in coping with input constraint and aerodynamic uncertainty.

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