DocumentCode
488791
Title
IMPAC - an Integrated Methodology for Propulsion and Airframe Control
Author
Garg, Sanjay ; Ouzts, Peter J. ; Lorenzo, Carl F. ; Mattern, Duane L.
Author_Institution
NASA Lewis Research Center, Advanced Control Technology Branch, Cleveland, Ohio 44135
fYear
1991
fDate
26-28 June 1991
Firstpage
747
Lastpage
754
Abstract
NASA is actively involved in the development of enabling technologies that will lead towards aircraft with new/enhanced maneuver capabilities such as Short Take-Off Vertical Landing (STOVL) and high angle of attack performance. Because of the high degree of dynamic coupling between the airframe and propulsion systems of these types of aircraft, one key technology is the integration of the flight and propulsion control. The NASA Lewis Research Center approach to developing Integrated Flight Propulsion Control (IFPC) technologies is an in-house research program referred to as IMPAC - Integrated Methodology for Propulsion and Airframe Control. The goals of IMPAC are to develop a viable alternative to the existing integrated control design methodologies that will allow for improved system performance and simplicity of control law synthesis and implementation, and to demonstrate the applicability of the methodology to a supersonic STOVL fighter aircraft. Based on some preliminary control design studies that included evaluation of the existing methodologies, the IFPC design methodology that is emerging at the Lewis Research Center consists of considering the airframe and propulsion systems as one integrated system for an initial centralized controller design and then partitioning the centralized controller into separate airframe and propulsion system subcontrollers to ease implementation and to set meaningful design requirements for detailed subsystem control design and evaluation. This paper provides an overview of IMPAC and includes detailed discussion of the various important design and evaluation steps in the methodology.
Keywords
Aerospace control; Aircraft propulsion; Centralized control; Control design; Control system synthesis; Control systems; Design methodology; NASA; Space technology; System performance;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
American Control Conference, 1991
Conference_Location
Boston, MA, USA
Print_ISBN
0-87942-565-2
Type
conf
Filename
4791474
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