PurposeDespite of the numerous characteristics of the multirotor unmanned aircraft systems (UASs), they have been termed as less energy-efficient compared to fixed-wing and helicopter counterparts. The purpose of this paper is to explore a more efficient multirotor configuration and to provide the robust and stable control system for it.Design/methodology/approachA heterogeneous multirotor configuration is explored in this paper, which employs a large rotor at the centre to provide majority of lift and three small tilted booms rotors to provide the control. Design provides the combined characteristics of both quadcopters and helicopters in a single UAS configuration, providing endurance of helicopters keeping the manoeuvrability, simplicity and control of quadcopters. In this paper, rotational as well as translational dynamics of the multirotor are explored. Cascade control system is designed to provide an effective solution to control the attitude, altitude and position of the rotorcraft.FindingsOne of the challenging tasks towards successful flight of such a configuration is to design a stable and robust control system as it is an underactuated system possessing complex non-linearities and coupled dynamics. Cascaded proportional integral (PI) control approach has provided an efficient solution with stable control performance. A novel motor control loop is implemented to ensure enhanced disturbance rejection, which is also validated through Dryden turbulence model and 1-cosine gust model.Originality/valueRobustness and stability of the proposed control structure for such a dynamically complex UAS configuration is demonstrated with stable attitude and position performance, reference tracking and enhanced disturbance rejection.
This paper presents a heterogeneous configuration of the multirotor unmanned aerial system (UAS) that features the combined characteristics of the helicopter and quadrotor in a single multirotor design, featuring the endurance and energy efficiency similar to a helicopter, while keeping the mechanical simplicity, control, and manoeuvrability of the standard quadrotor. Power needed for a rotorcraft to hover has the inverse relation with the rotor disc. Therefore, multiple small rotors of the quadrotor are energetically outperformed by a large rotor of the helicopter, for a similar size. Designing the stable control system for such a dynamically complex multirotor configuration remains the main challenge as the studies previously carried out on these designs have successfully demonstrated energy efficiency but at the cost of degraded attitude control. Advancements in the energetics of the multirotor results in enhanced endurance and range that could be highly effective in remote operation applications. However, a stable control system is required for accurate positioning. In this paper, a cascaded PID control approach is proposed to provide the control solution for this heterogeneous multirotor. Automatic tuning is proposed to design the PID controller for each loop of the cascade structure. A relay feedback experiment is conducted in a controlled environment, followed by identification of the open-loop frequency response and estimation of dynamics. Subsequently, PID controllers are tuned through approximated models with the help of tuning rules. A custom-designed flight controller is used to experimentally implement the proposed control structure. Presented experimental results demonstrate the efficacy of the proposed control strategy for heterogeneous multirotor UAS.
Summary The performance of small fixed‐wing unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) is easily degraded by exogenous disturbances. In an attempt to improve the performance, the structural change is made in conventional small fixed‐wing UAV through segmentation of each aileron control surface into multiples. Detailed system identification experiments are performed on each aileron pair in the wind tunnel to acquire linear dynamic models for the roll attitude of the UAV. These experiments have provided the transfer functions for the aileron control surfaces based on corresponding frequency response. Three distinctive model predictive controllers are designed and deployed in real‐time hardware to achieve the roll attitude control. The roll attitude control experiments are validated in wind tunnel under both normal and turbulent environments. The results show that multiple input and single output control system provides significant improvement in the roll attitude and disturbance rejection performance. The collective actuation of multiple control surfaces improves roll stability by 10.1%$$ 10.1\% $$ to 67.87%$$ 67.87\% $$ when compared to the single aileron pair based conventional control in the presence of turbulent flight conditions.
Unlike bigger aircraft, the small fixed-wing unmanned aerial vehicles face significant stability challenges in a turbulent environment. To improve the flight performance, a fixed-wing UAV with segmented aileron control surfaces has been designed and deployed. A total of four ailerons are attached to the main wing and grouped into inner and outer aileron pairs. The controllers are automatically tuned by utilizing the frequency response data obtained via the frequency sampling filter and the relay with embedded integrator experiments. The hardware validation experiments are performed in the normal and turbulent flight environments under three configurations: inner aileron pair only, outer aileron pair only and collective actuation of all the aileron pairs. The error-threshold-based control is introduced to handle collective actuation of aileron pairs. The experiments have manifested that the collective usage of all aileron segments improves the roll attitude stability by a margin of 38.69% to 43.51% when compared to the independent actuation of aileron pairs in a turbulent atmosphere.
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