학술논문

A Practical Design Approach for Complex Path Tracking Control of a Tailless Fixed-Wing Unmanned Aerial Vehicle With a Single Pair of Elevons
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE/ASME Transactions on Mechatronics IEEE/ASME Trans. Mechatron. Mechatronics, IEEE/ASME Transactions on. 29(2):1397-1408 Apr, 2024
Subject
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Autonomous aerial vehicles
Vehicle dynamics
Aerodynamics
Mechatronics
IEEE transactions
Global Positioning System
Elevators
Complex path tracking control
fixed-wing
single pair of elevons
++%24%5Cmathcal+{S}%24<%2Ftex-math>+<%2Finline-formula>+<%2Fnamed-content>-procedure+relaxation%22"> $\mathcal {S}$ -procedure relaxation
sum of squares (SOS)
tailless
unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)
Language
ISSN
1083-4435
1941-014X
Abstract
This article presents a practical design approach for complex path tracking control of a tailless fixed-wing unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) with a single pair of elevons, which is considered to be one of the most challenging UAVs to control. The proposed approach provides a well-balanced design that considers both the kinematics and dynamics of the UAV. A sum-of-squares (SOS) design framework is employed to achieve the complex path tracking control of the tailless UAV. By introducing $\mathcal {S}$-procedure relaxations, more relaxed SOS conditions are newly derived to design a controller that satisfies three design requirements: 1) a sufficient decay rate of the bank angle error, 2) a real actuator constraint, and 3) a smaller $L_{2}$ gain with respect to the rotational motion dynamics. Instead of finding a unique and fully optimized feedback gain that satisfies the three SOS design requirements, the design approach finds a selectable region of semioptimized feedback gains that satisfy the SOS inequality constraints. The design policy is suitable for practical use as it allows for adjusting feedback gains within the specific selectable region during actual experiments to handle flight performance degradation caused by unmodeled characteristics. Finally, flight experiment results demonstrate the utility of the proposed design approach.