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Robust reconfigurable flight control

From the perspective control practitioners, control of dynamics systems subjected to varying parameters is not a new topic. However systematic methods to accommodate such problems are relatively few and recent. This thesis addresses a subset of such problems falling under the nomenclature of Reconfigurable Control Systems in relation to flight control applications. A survey in the initial phase of research indicated a wide range of ad-hoc solutions with relatively brittle or non-existent theoretical guarantees towards to the stability of the entire system. Often the reconfigurable architecture consists of multiple conceptual components performing task of identifying system parameter changes, monitoring degradation in system performance and eventually finding some corrective action to regain lost performance. The change in system parameters if attributed to faults and damages to system, then the task of the control system is to achieve fault tolerance. Such fault tolerance is of high interest for flight control community since such a control system adaptation may lead to accommodation of real life faults during aircraft operation such as control surface damages, hydraulic actuation failures etc. The thesis work aims towards developing online control redesign methods capable of taking into account realistic requirements. The goals are 1) To find control input values in presence of faults. 2) Accommodate changes in performance criterion in presence of faults and, 3) Incorporate actuator limitations such as rate and position bounds. The research work is divided in three subparts. The initial phase consists of a study of existing solutions and methods capable of providing reconfigurable flight control architectures. This phase also covers some flight control literature relevant in the context of faults. Though the conclusions of this initial phase seem theoretically simple and straight forward, it is interesting to understand the amount of time and efforts invested by real world flight control practitioners to deduce these results. Essentially the work flow of this research work stems from practical requirement eventually leading to theoretical developments that can approximate the requirements often demanded by the people in field. The second phase consists of study and application of existing Model Predictive Control methods to the field of reconfigurable flight control. MPC has been successful in major complex control problems due to its online constrained optimisation methodology. Along-with certain theoretical extensions it is well capable of providing a successful means to redesign control action online in presence of failures. Simulation studies of sufficient fidelity and complexity on a full envelop fighter aircraft nonlinear model prove such control reconfiguration capabilities of MPC. Some new extensions of MPC have been developed to show it performing in a superior manner to conventional nominal formulations. The third phase of the research work focuses on further theoretical developments in the field robust adaptive control in MPC frame of operation. A new MPC formulation is derived which can accommodate constraints, uncertainty and constant disturbances (due to failed inputs). The novelty lies in the theoretical properties of this MPC as under certain conditions it is guaranteed to be asymptotically stable. This setup implements an optimization problem more complex than that of the nominal case. Typically, when disturbances and uncertainties are incorporated into the performance measure within MPC formulations, mini-max (worst-case) NP-hard problems can arise. The thesis contributes to the theory of robust synthesis by proposing a convex relaxation of a mini-max based MPC controller by adopting a Linear Matrix Inequality (LMI) optimisation formulation.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:427424
Date January 2004
CreatorsKale, Mangesh M.
PublisherUniversity of Southampton
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttps://eprints.soton.ac.uk/45932/

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