SYSYApr 24

Robust Adaptive Sliding-Mode Control for Damaged Fixed-Wing UAVs

arXiv:2602.175048.1h-index: 4
Predicted impact top 55% in SY · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For UAV operators, this controller enhances mission reliability by providing robustness to structural or control surface damage, addressing a key limitation of conventional autopilots.

The paper proposes a robust adaptive sliding mode controller for fixed-wing UAVs that maintains stable flight and bounded tracking errors despite aerodynamic coefficient perturbations and partial loss of control surface effectiveness, as demonstrated in simulations.

Many unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) can remain aerodynamically flyable after sustaining structural or control surface damage, yet insufficient robustness in conventional autopilots often leads to mission failure. This paper proposes a robust adaptive sliding mode controller (RASMC) for fixed-wing UAVs subject to aerodynamic coefficient perturbations and partial loss of control surface effectiveness. A damage-aware flight dynamics model is developed to systematically analyze the impact of such impairments on the closed-loop behavior. The RASMC is designed to ensure reliable tracking and stabilization, while a gain adaptation law maintains low control effort under nominal conditions and increases the gains as needed in the presence of aerodynamic damage. Lyapunov-based stability guarantees are derived, and assumptions on admissible uncertainty bounds are formulated to characterize the limits within which closed-loop stability and performance can be ensured. The proposed controller is implemented within an existing UAV autopilot framework, where outer-loop guidance and speed control modules provide reference commands to the RASMC for attitude stabilization. Simulations demonstrate that, despite significant damage, all closed-loop states remain stable with bounded tracking errors.

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