Title :
Dynamic inversion-based adaptive/reconfigurable control of the X-33 on ascent
Author :
Ngo, Anhtuan D. ; Doman, David B.
Author_Institution :
Air Force Res. Lab., WPAFB, OH, USA
Abstract :
A quaternion-based attitude control system is developed for the X-33 in the ascent flight phase. A nonlinear control law commands body-axis rotation rates that align the angular velocity vector with an Euler-axis defining the axis of rotation that takes the body-axis system into a desired-axis system. The magnitudes of the commanded body rates are determined by the magnitude of the rotation error The commanded body rates form the input to a dynamic inversion-based adaptive/reconfigurable control law. The indirect adaptive control portion uses online system identification to estimate the current control effectiveness matrix to update a control allocation module. The control allocation nominally operates in a minimum deflection mode; however, if a fault is detected, it can operate in a null-space injection mode that excites and decorrelates the effecters without degrading the vehicle response in order to enable online system identification. The overall system is designed to provide fault and damage tolerance for the X-33 on ascent. The baseline control law supports full envelope operation and eliminates trajectory dependent gain-scheduling that is typically found on this type of vehicle. Preliminary results are shown to demonstrate the feasibility of the approach
Keywords :
adaptive control; aircraft control; attitude control; fault tolerance; identification; matrix algebra; military aircraft; nonlinear control systems; online operation; Euler-axis; X-33; adaptive control; angular velocity vector; ascent flight phase; body-axis rotation rates; control allocation module; control effectiveness matrix; damage tolerance; dynamic inversion-based control; fault tolerance; full envelope operation; minimum deflection mode; nonlinear control law; null-space injection mode; online system identification; quaternion-based attitude control system; reconfigurable control; trajectory dependent gain-scheduling elimination; Adaptive control; Angular velocity; Angular velocity control; Control systems; Nonlinear control systems; Nonlinear dynamical systems; Programmable control; System identification; Vehicle dynamics; Vehicles;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference, 2001, IEEE Proceedings.
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-6599-2
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2001.931289