To solve the attitude control problem of bird-like flapping wing micro air vehicles (FWMAVs) during automatic landing, an active disturbance rejection control (ADRC) architecture is proposed in this paper. This control scheme takes into account the attitude control of flapping , transition and gliding modes in the process of automatic landing. To verify the control effect, the aerodynamic estimation method of the flapping wing based on quasi-steady theory and the dynamics of an FWMAV in Lagrangian form are applied in the simulation. The proposed control architecture consists of two independent ADRC controllers to stabilize the attitude of the pitch and roll channels. The system disturbance and the coupling effects between channels are estimated by an extended state observer (ESO) and compensated in real time in the control output. The convergence of the ESO and ADRC is proven. Simulation results show that even if the aircraft is in different flight modes, the ADRC controller can track the target trajectory quickly and accurately. Then, to realize automatic landing in a real environment, a simplified two-stage landing trajectory is designed. A landing test is carried out on this basis. The test results show that ADRC can not only stabilize the flight attitude in flapping mode but also obtain a satisfactory control accuracy and convergence speed when the aircraft is in the transition and gliding modes, confirming its usefulness in automatic landing. INDEX TERMS flapping wing micro air vehicle, active disturbance rejection control, attitude control automatic landing
This paper proposes an attitude control scheme for the Dove flapping wing micro air vehicle in intermittent flapping and gliding flight. The Dove flapping wing micro air vehicle adopts intermittent flapping and gliding flight to make the wing movements more natural; this strategy also has the potential to reduce energy consumption. To implement this specific flight mode, this paper proposes a closed-loop active disturbance rejection control strategy to stabilize the attitude during the processes of flapping flight, transition and gliding flight. The active disturbance rejection control controller is composed of three parts: a tracking differentiator, a linear extended state observer and a nonlinear state error feedback controller. The tracking differentiator estimates the given target signal and the differential signal in real time. The extended state observer estimates the system states and system nonlinearity. Moreover, the bandwidth parameterization method is applied to determine the observer gains. The stability of the closed-loop system is verified using Lyapunov’s theorem. Several outdoor flight experiments have been conducted to verify the effectiveness of the proposed control method, and the results show that the proposed method can guarantee the stability of intermittent flapping and gliding flight.
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