报告题目:Advanced real-time fault diagnosis and fault-tolerant control: from paper to planes
报 告 人:万一鸣博士(Delft University of Technology)
报告时间:2015年6月10 日下午 3:00
报告地点:南一楼中311室
Abstract:
Analytical redundancy based fault diagnosis (FD) and fault-tolerant control (FTC) techniques have been studied in academia over the past 20 years, but they have not achieved expected maturity in the aircraft industry. The European Framework 7th project “REconfiguration of CONtrol in Flight for Integral Global Upset REcovery (RECONFIGURE)” combines efforts from both academia and industry, aiming at enabling the benefits of advanced FD and FTC methods in commercial aircrafts.
This talk includes three different fault scenarios (air data sensor faults, stall load on elevators, and ice accretion on the wings) investigated in the RECONFIGURE project. We adopt moving horizon estimation (MHE) and model predictive control (MPC) techniques, and show how their capacity of constraint handling can 1) lead to better trade-off between sensitivity to fault and robustness to disturbance for detecting air data sensor faults; 2) allow easy integration between control reconfiguration and active diagnosis of elevator faults. We also develop data-driven moving horizon unknown input estimation methods as a component of data-driven predictive control in the icing condition.
Estimation and control algorithms in a flight control system need to satisfy real-time requirements in a rather limited computing platform. The related implementation constraints impose a grand challenge for the computationally intensive MHE and MPC techniques. This talk also includes our preliminary efforts in bringing nonlinear MHE into fast real-time applications.
Speaker’s Short Bio:
Dr. Yiming Wan received the B.S. degree from Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, in 2007, and the Ph.D. degree from Tsinghua University, Beijing, in 2013, both in control engineering. Currently, he is a postdoc researcher in Delft Center for Systems and Control, Delft University of Technology, The Netherlands. His research interests include model-based and data-driven fault diagnosis and fault-tolerant predictive control, with applications in aircraft systems and chemical processes.