Autonomous Flight Control Laws Design for a Tailless Flying-wing Unmanned Aerial Vehicle

Author(s):  
Xiaobo QU ◽  
Zhongjian LI ◽  
Jian Tang
Author(s):  
Öztürk Özdemir Kanat ◽  
Ertuğrul Karatay ◽  
Oğuz Köse ◽  
Tuğrul Oktay

In this article, combined active flow control system and flight control system design for morphing unmanned aerial vehicles is applied for the first time for autonomous flight performance maximization. For this purpose, longitudinal and lateral dynamics modeling of morphing unmanned aerial vehicle having active flow control manufactured in Erciyes University, Faculty of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Model Aircraft Laboratory is considered in order to obtain simulation environments. Our produced morphing unmanned aerial vehicle is called as ZANKA-II, which has a mass of 6.5 kg, range of 30 km, endurance of 0.5 h, and ceiling altitude of 6000 m. von Karman turbulence modeling is used in order to model atmospheric turbulence during flight in both longitudinal and lateral simulation environments. A stochastic optimization method called as simultaneous perturbation stochastic approximation is also applied for the first time in order to obtain optimum dimensions of morphing parameters (i.e. extension ratios of wingspan and tail span), optimum positions of blowers, and optimum magnitudes of longitudinal and lateral controllers' gains (i.e. P, I, and D gains) while minimizing cost index capturing terms for both longitudinal and lateral autonomous flight performances and there exist lower and upper constraints on all optimization variables in the literature.


Author(s):  
İsmail Hakkı Şahin ◽  
Coşku Kasnakoğlu

This paper investigates a methodology for autopilot design for an unmanned air vehicle where one of the lateral control surfaces, i.e. the aileron or rudder, becomes jammed and unusable. The autopilot handles the automatic recovery, autonomous guidance and landing of the disabled unmanned aerial vehicle. An accurate nonlinear aircraft model is used to build local flight control laws using loop-shaping to decouple longitudinal and lateral channels. The design is carried out in a way to allow smooth scheduling over the local controllers without losing stability and performance, culminating in a robust emergency autopilot over the full flight envelope. The autopilot is tested on an example distress scenario involving aileron surface jam. It is confirmed through simulations that the autopilot design is capable of resuming safe flight and autonomous navigation under the fault scenario and is able to safely land the unmanned aerial vehicle to a target runway.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 2044-2051
Author(s):  
Danial Sufiyan ◽  
Luke Soe Thura Win ◽  
Shane Kyi Hla Win ◽  
Gim Song Soh ◽  
Shaohui Foong

2011 ◽  
Vol 2011 (0) ◽  
pp. _1A2-O11_1-_1A2-O11_4
Author(s):  
Kenta Go ◽  
Atsushi KONNO ◽  
Takaaki MATSUMOTO ◽  
Atsushi OOSEDO ◽  
Kouji MASUKO ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document