Jérôme CieslakDavid HenryAli ZolghadriPhilippe Goupil
This paper discusses the design of an active fault-tolerant flight control strategy for improvement of the operational control capability of the aircraft system. The research work draws expertise from actions undertaken within the European Flight Mechanics Action Group [FM-AG(16)] on fault-tolerant control, which develops a collaborative effort in Europe to create new fault-tolerant control technologies that significantly advance the goals of the aviation safety. The methodology is applied to a trimmable horizontal stabilizer runaway fault occurring in a large transport aircraft. The goal is to provide a self-repairing capability to enable the pilot to land the aircraft safely. The fault-tolerant control strategy works in such a way that once the fault is detected by the fault detection and isolation unit, a compensation loop is activated for safe recovery. A key feature of the proposed strategy is that the design of the fault-tolerant control loop is done independently of the nominal autopilot and the nominal flight control system in place. Nonlinear simulation results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed fault-tolerant control scheme.
Ali ZolghadriDavid HenryJérôme CieslakDenis EfimovPhilippe Goupil
Jiaxin ZhaoPingli LuChangkun DuFangfei Cao
Muhammad Sohail Khan RajaQasim Ali