Sliding mode control-based limit cycle oscillation suppression for UAVs using synthetic jet actuators

Author(s):  
Natalie Ramos-Pedroza ◽  
William MacKunis ◽  
Mahmut Reyhanoglu
Sensors ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (12) ◽  
pp. 4449 ◽  
Author(s):  
Man Zhou ◽  
Dapeng Mao ◽  
Mingyue Zhang ◽  
Lihong Guo ◽  
Mingde Gong

Electromechanical actuator (EMA) systems are widely employed in missiles. Due to the influence of the nonlinearities, there is a flat-top of about 64 ms when tracking the small-angle sinusoidal signals, which significantly reduces the performance of the EMA system and even causes the missile trajectory to oscillate. Aiming to solve these problems, this paper presents a hybrid control for flat-top situations. In contrast to the traditional PID or sliding mode controllers that missiles usually use, this paper utilizes improved sliding mode control based on a novel reaching law to eliminate the flat-top during the steering of the input signal, and utilizes the PID control to replace discontinuous control and improve the performance of EMA system. In addition, boundary layer and switching function are employed to solve the high-frequency chattering problem caused by traditional sliding mode control. Experiments indicate that the hybrid control can evidently reduce the flat-top time from 64 ms to 12 ms and eliminate the trajectory limit cycle oscillation. Compared with PID controllers, the proposed controller provides better performance—less chattering, less flat-top, higher precision, and no oscillation.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Ramos-Pedroza ◽  
W. MacKunis ◽  
M. Reyhanoglu

A sliding mode control- (SMC-) based limit cycle oscillation (LCO) regulation method is presented, which achieves asymptotic LCO suppression for UAVs using synthetic jet actuators (SJAs). With a focus on applications involving small UAVs with limited onboard computational resources, the controller is designed with a simplistic structure, requiring no adaptive laws, function approximators, or complex calculations in the control loop. The control law is rigorously proven to achieve asymptotic regulation of both pitching and plunging displacements for a class of systems in a dual-parallel underactuated form, where a single scalar control signal simultaneously affects two states. Since dual-parallel underactuated systems cannot be expressed in a strict feedback or cascade form, standard backstepping-based control techniques cannot be applied. This difficulty is mitigated through careful algebraic manipulation in the regulation error system development, along with innovative design of the sliding surface. A detailed model of the UAV LCO dynamics is utilized, and a rigorous analysis is provided to prove asymptotic regulation of the pitching and plunging displacements. Numerical simulation results are provided to demonstrate the performance of the control law.


Robotics ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 330-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
Natalie Pedroza ◽  
William MacKunis ◽  
Vladimir Golubev

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