Fault-tolerant image filter design using GA

Author(s):  
Zhiguo Bao ◽  
Fangfang Wang ◽  
Xiaoming Zhao ◽  
Takahiro Watanabe
2011 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 333-337 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhiguo Bao ◽  
Fangfang Wang ◽  
Xiaoming Zhao ◽  
Takahiro Watanabe

2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tao Tao ◽  
Chakradhar Byreddy ◽  
Kenneth D. Frampton

The purpose of this work is to experimentally demonstrate a fault-tolerant active vibration control system. Active vibration control is achieved using piezoceramic sensors and actuators (transducers) that are attached to a simply supported beam. These transducers are used by a set of optimal H2 feedback compensators to minimize the lateral vibration of a beam. Actuator faults are detected and isolated with a Beard–Jones fault detection filter. This filter is a special case of Luenberger observer, which produces a residual output with specific directional properties in response to a system fault. In this current research work, a new Beard–Jones filter design methodology is introduced that permits its use on high-order systems and also on systems with feed-through dynamics. The output of this detection filter is monitored by a hybrid automaton that determines when faults occur. This hybrid automaton then directs the selection of a feedback compensator specifically designed for the detected system fault state. The result is a vibration control system that is capable of maintaining optimal performance in the presence of system faults.


Aerospace ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (7) ◽  
pp. 76
Author(s):  
Daniel Ossmann ◽  
Manuel Pusch

Active control techniques are a key factor in today’s aircraft developments to reduce structural loads and thereby enable highly efficient aircraft designs. Likewise, increasing the autonomy of aircraft systems aims to maintain the highest degree of operational performance also in fault scenarios. Motivated by these two aspects, this article describes the design and validation of a fault tolerant gust load alleviation control system on a flexible wing in a wind tunnel. The baseline gust load alleviation controller isolates and damps the weakly damped first wing bending mode. The mode isolation is performed via an H 2 -optimal blending of control inputs and measurement outputs, which allows for the design of a simple single-input single-output controller to actively damp the mode. To handle actuator faults, a control allocation scheme based on quadratic programming is implemented, which distributes the required control energy to the remaining available control surfaces. The control allocation is triggered in fault scenarios by a fault detection scheme developed to monitor the actuators using nullspace based filter design techniques. Finally, the fault tolerant control scheme is verified by wind tunnel experiments.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document