• DocumentCode
    2056378
  • Title

    Performance comparison of two altitude-control algorithms for a fixed-wing UAV

  • Author

    Ahsan, Muhammad ; Shafique, Khurram ; Bin Mansoor, Atif ; Mushtaq, Mudassar

  • Author_Institution
    Nat. Univ. of Sci. & Technol., Islamabad, Pakistan
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    25-26 Sept. 2013
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    5
  • Abstract
    Uninhabited aerial vehicles (UAV) have proven their tremendous capabilities in military and civil applications. In a UAV, the onboard autopilot autonomously controls the aircraft flight and navigation. The altitude acquire-and-hold is an important function of autopilot, implemented using a control design algorithm that flies the UAV to commanded altitude and maintains it. Most of the commercially available autopilots use Proportional-Integral-Derivative (PID) controllers for altitude and heading control. In this paper, we present a performance comparison of two altitude-controller design techniques, the PID controller and the Phase Lead compensator. We have used a nonlinear mathematical model of the UAV Aerosonde in our work. The nonlinear model is lineraized around a stable trim condition and decoupled for linear controller design. The designed controllers are tested with the nonlinear model in view of small perturbation control theory. The results for the compensated linear and nonlinear models are presented. Our investigation reveals that Phase Lead compensator has inherent strengths compared to PID controller for UAV altitude acquire- and-hold in terms of better transient response, thus improving the payload performance during an altitude-change maneuver. The findings may lead to an effective approach in UAV autopilot design.
  • Keywords
    aerospace components; aircraft control; attitude control; autonomous aerial vehicles; control system synthesis; nonlinear control systems; path planning; perturbation techniques; stability; three-term control; transient response; PID controller; UAV Aerosonde; UAV altitude acquire-and-hold; UAV autopilot design; aircraft navigation; altitude control; altitude-change maneuver; altitude-control algorithms; altitude-controller design techniques; autonomously aircraft flight controls; civil applications; commercially available autopilots; control design algorithm; fixed-wing UAV; heading control; linear controller design; military applications; nonlinear mathematical model; onboard autopilot; payload performance; perturbation control theory; phase lead compensator; proportional-integral-derivative controllers; transient response; uninhabited aerial vehicles; Aerospace control; Aircraft; Atmospheric modeling; Elevators; Mathematical model; Stability analysis; Unmanned aerial vehicles; PID-control; Phase-Lead-compensator; altitude-control; autopilots; unmanned aerial vehicle;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Computer,Control & Communication (IC4), 2013 3rd International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Karachi
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4673-6011-1
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/IC4.2013.6653744
  • Filename
    6653744