Adaptive Nonlinear Incremental Flight Control for Systems with Unknown Control Effectiveness

Journal Article (2022)
Author(s)

Jing Chang (TU Delft - Aerospace Structures & Computational Mechanics)

R. de Breuker (TU Delft - Aerospace Structures & Computational Mechanics)

Sherry Wang (TU Delft - Aerospace Structures & Computational Mechanics)

Research Group
Aerospace Structures & Computational Mechanics
Copyright
© 2022 J. Chang, R. De Breuker, Xuerui Wang
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1109/TAES.2022.3187057
More Info
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Publication Year
2022
Language
English
Copyright
© 2022 J. Chang, R. De Breuker, Xuerui Wang
Research Group
Aerospace Structures & Computational Mechanics
Issue number
1
Volume number
59
Pages (from-to)
228-240
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

This article exposes that although some sensor-based nonlinear fault-tolerant control frameworks including incremental nonlinear dynamic inversion control can passively resist a wide range of actuator faults and structural damage without requiring an accurate model of the dynamic system, their stability heavily relies on a sufficient condition, which is unfortunately violated if the control direction is unknown. Consequently, it is proved in this article that no matter, which perturbation compensation technique (adaptive, disturbance observer, sliding-mode) is implemented, none of the existing nonlinear incremental control methods can guarantee closed-loop stability. Therefore, this article proposes a Nussbaum function-based adaptive incremental control framework for nonlinear dynamic systems with partially known (control direction is unknown) or even completely unknown control effectiveness. Its effectiveness is proved in the Lyapunov sense and is also verified via numerical simulations of an aircraft attitude tracking problem in the presence of sensing errors, parametric model uncertainties, structural damage, actuator faults, as well as inversed and unknown control effectiveness.

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