scholarly journals Stochastic Drift Counteraction Optimal Control of a Fuel Cell-Powered Small Unmanned Aerial Vehicle

Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (5) ◽  
pp. 1304
Author(s):  
Jiadi Zhang ◽  
Ilya Kolmanovsky ◽  
Mohammad Reza Amini

This paper investigates optimal power management of a fuel cell hybrid small unmanned aerial vehicle (sUAV) from the perspective of endurance (time of flight) maximization in a stochastic environment. Stochastic drift counteraction optimal control is exploited to obtain an optimal policy for power management that coordinates the operation of the fuel cell and battery to maximize the expected flight time while accounting for the limits on the rate of change of fuel cell power output and the orientation dependence of fuel cell efficiency. The proposed power management strategy accounts for known statistics in transitions of propeller power and climb angle during the mission, but does not require the exact preview of their time histories. The optimal control policy is generated offline using value iterations implemented in Cython, demonstrating an order of magnitude speedup as compared to MATLAB. It is also shown that the value iterations can be further sped up using a discount factor, but at the cost of decreased performance. Simulation results for a 1.5 kg sUAV are reported that illustrate the optimal coordination between the fuel cell and the battery during aircraft maneuvers, including a turnpike in the battery state of charge (SOC) trajectory. As the fuel cell is not able to support fast changes in power output, the optimal policy is shown to charge the battery to the turnpike value if starting from a low initial SOC value. If starting from a high SOC value, the battery energy is used till a turnpike value of the SOC is reached with further discharge delayed to later in the flight. For the specific scenarios and simulated sUAV parameters considered, the results indicate the capability of up to 2.7 h of flight time.

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 2170031
Author(s):  
Betül Erdör Türk ◽  
Mustafa Hadi Sarul ◽  
Ekrem Çengelci ◽  
Çiğdem İyigün Karadağ ◽  
Fatma Gül Boyacı San ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
pp. 2000879
Author(s):  
Betül Erdör Türk ◽  
Mustafa Hadi Sarul ◽  
Ekrem Çengelci ◽  
Çiğdem İyigün Karadağ ◽  
Fatma Gül Boyacı San ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 55 (4) ◽  
pp. 652-657 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gabriel Murariu ◽  
Razvan Adrian Mahu ◽  
Adrian Gabriel Murariu ◽  
Mihai Daniel Dragu ◽  
Lucian P. Georgescu ◽  
...  

This article presents the design of a specific unmanned aerial vehicle UAV prototype own building. Our UAV is a flying wing type and is able to take off with a little boost. This system happily combines some major advantages taken from planes namely the ability to fly horizontal, at a constant altitude and of course, the great advantage of a long flight-time. The aerodynamic models presented in this paper are optimized to improve the operational performance of this aerial vehicle, especially in terms of stability and the possibility of a long gliding flight-time. Both aspects are very important for the increasing of the goals� efficiency and for the getting work jobs. The presented simulations were obtained using ANSYS 13 installed on our university� cluster system. In a next step the numerical results will be compared with those during experimental flights. This paper presents the main results obtained from numerical simulations and the obtained magnitudes of the main flight coefficients.


2021 ◽  
Vol 92 (10) ◽  
pp. 618-622
Author(s):  
Yu. A. Burtsev ◽  
A. V. Pavlenko ◽  
I. V. Vasyukov ◽  
V. S. Puzin ◽  
A. V. Zhivodernikov

Author(s):  
Nicolas Michel ◽  
Zhaodan Kong ◽  
Xinfan Lin

Abstract Electric multirotor aircraft with vertical-take-off-and-landing capabilities are emerging as a revolutionary transportation mode. This paper studies optimal control of a multirotor unmanned aerial vehicle based on a system-level multiphysical model. The model considers aerodynamics of the rotor-propeller assembly, electro-mechanical dynamics of the motor and motor controller, and rigid-body dynamics of the vehicle, as control based on a system-level model incorporating all these dynamics and their coupling is missing in literature. A forward flight operation is considered for time-optimal and energy-optimal control, as well as battery voltages of 25 V and 21 V. Energy-optimal control is shown to reduce the energy required for the operation by 38.5% at 25 V, while reducing the battery voltage increases the minimum operation time by 19.8%. The energy-optimal cruise velocity is also examined, demonstrating that the optimal velocity predicted without considering rotor aerodynamics uses 35.2% more energy per meter travelled than is required at the true optimal velocity.


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