scholarly journals Identifying limits of linear control design validity in nonlinear systems: a continuation-based approach

Author(s):  
D. H. Nguyen ◽  
M. H. Lowenberg ◽  
S. A. Neild

AbstractIt is well known that a linear-based controller is only valid near the point from which the linearised system is obtained. The question remains as to how far one can move away from that point before the linear and nonlinear responses differ significantly, resulting in the controller failing to achieve the desired performance. In this paper, we propose a method to quantify these differences. By appending a harmonic oscillator to the equations of motion, the frequency responses at different operating points of a nonlinear system can be generated using numerical continuation. In the presence of strong nonlinearities, subtle differences exist between the linear and nonlinear frequency responses, and these variations are also reflected in the step responses. A systematic way of comparing the discrepancies between the linear and the nonlinear frequency responses is presented, which can determine whether the controller performs as predicted by linear-based design. We demonstrate the method on a simple fixed-gain Duffing system and a gain-scheduled reduced-order aircraft model with a manoeuvre-demand controller; the latter presents a case where strong nonlinearities exist in the form of multiple attractors. The analysis is then expanded to include actuator rate saturation, which creates a limit-cycle isola, coexisting multiple solutions (corresponding to the so-called flying qualities cliff), and chaotic motions. The proposed method can infer the influence of these additional attractors even when there is no systematic way to detect them. Finally, when severe rate saturation is present, reducing the controller gains can mitigate—but not eliminate—the risk of limit-cycle oscillation.

2014 ◽  
Vol 556-562 ◽  
pp. 4329-4332
Author(s):  
Yan Ping Xiao ◽  
Yi Ren Yang ◽  
Peng Li

In this paper structural equations of motion based on nonlinear beam theory and the unsteady aerodynamic forces are gained to study the effects of geometric nonlinearity on the aerodynamic response of high-aspect-ratio wings. Then the Galerkin’s method is used to discretize the equations of motion. The results of HALE wing show good agreement with references. And other results investigate the effects of geometric structural nonlinearity on the response of a wing. Also the complex changes of the limit-cycle oscillation with speed increasing is carefully studied.


Author(s):  
Jae-Sung Bae ◽  
In Lee

The nonlinear aeroelastic characteristics of a fighter-type wing with control surface have been investigated. The fictitious mass modal approach is used to reduce the problem size and the computation time in the linear and nonlinear flutter analyses. A Doublet-Hybrid method are used for the computation of subsonic unsteady aerodynamic forces. Structural nonlinearity of the control surface hinge is represented by a free-play spring. The linear and nonlinear flutter analyses indicate that the flapping mode of control surface and the hinge stiffness have significant effects on the flutter characteristics. The nonlinear flutter analysis shows that limit cycle oscillation and chaotic motion are observed in the wide range of air speed below the linear flutter boundary and the jump of limit cycle oscillation amplitude is observed. The nonlinear flutter characteristics and the nonlinear flutter boundary of limit cycle oscillation and chaotic motion have been investigated.


2017 ◽  
Vol 121 (1241) ◽  
pp. 940-969 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Hayes ◽  
R. Dwight ◽  
S. Marques

ABSTRACTThe assimilation of discrete data points with model predictions can be used to achieve a reduction in the uncertainty of the model input parameters, which generate accurate predictions. The problem investigated here involves the prediction of limit-cycle oscillations using a High-Dimensional Harmonic Balance (HDHB) method. The efficiency of the HDHB method is exploited to enable calibration of structural input parameters using a Bayesian inference technique. Markov-chain Monte Carlo is employed to sample the posterior distributions. Parameter estimation is carried out on a pitch/plunge aerofoil and two Goland wing configurations. In all cases, significant refinement was achieved in the distribution of possible structural parameters allowing better predictions of their true deterministic values. Additionally, a comparison of two approaches to extract the true values from the posterior distributions is presented.


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