Experimental Investigation of Helicopter Weight and Mass Center Estimation

Real-time estimates of weight and mass center location for helicopters are desirable for flight control and condition-based maintenance purposes. While methods to estimate mass parameters of helicopters have been developed, they often assume near-perfect knowledge of helicopter dynamics and have bee...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Taylor, Bradley Whitten
Other Authors: Rogers, Jonathan
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/149488
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-1494882013-10-05T04:02:18ZExperimental Investigation of Helicopter Weight and Mass Center EstimationTaylor, Bradley WhittenHelicopterWeightMass CenterEstimationReal-time estimates of weight and mass center location for helicopters are desirable for flight control and condition-based maintenance purposes. While methods to estimate mass parameters of helicopters have been developed, they often assume near-perfect knowledge of helicopter dynamics and have been validated only through simulated measurement data. The work described here aims to experimentally validate a method for weight and mass center estimation using an ALIGN T-REX 600e R/C helicopter. The estimation algorithm utilizes an extended Kalman filter (EKF) which estimates the helicopter states along with the weight and mass center location in real-time. Nonlinear system identification is performed using maximum likelihood estimation to create an accurate dynamic model for use in the EKF. Results show that given a reasonably accurate dynamic model, weight, stationline mass center location, and buttline mass center location can be reliably estimated in non-descending flight conditions. Weight estimation is shown to be robust to sudden weight changes during flight, whereas stationline and buttline mass center estimates are marginally robust to sudden shifts in the mass center location. Waterline mass center proved to be unobservable for the axial flight maneuvers conducted. Detailed flight test studies characterize estimation error in weight and three-dimensional mass center position using the EKF formulation.Rogers, JonathanJunkins, JohnHurtado, John ERathinam, Sivakumar2013-10-03T14:47:53Z2013-052013-04-09May 20132013-10-03T14:47:53ZThesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/149488en
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Helicopter
Weight
Mass Center
Estimation
spellingShingle Helicopter
Weight
Mass Center
Estimation
Taylor, Bradley Whitten
Experimental Investigation of Helicopter Weight and Mass Center Estimation
description Real-time estimates of weight and mass center location for helicopters are desirable for flight control and condition-based maintenance purposes. While methods to estimate mass parameters of helicopters have been developed, they often assume near-perfect knowledge of helicopter dynamics and have been validated only through simulated measurement data. The work described here aims to experimentally validate a method for weight and mass center estimation using an ALIGN T-REX 600e R/C helicopter. The estimation algorithm utilizes an extended Kalman filter (EKF) which estimates the helicopter states along with the weight and mass center location in real-time. Nonlinear system identification is performed using maximum likelihood estimation to create an accurate dynamic model for use in the EKF. Results show that given a reasonably accurate dynamic model, weight, stationline mass center location, and buttline mass center location can be reliably estimated in non-descending flight conditions. Weight estimation is shown to be robust to sudden weight changes during flight, whereas stationline and buttline mass center estimates are marginally robust to sudden shifts in the mass center location. Waterline mass center proved to be unobservable for the axial flight maneuvers conducted. Detailed flight test studies characterize estimation error in weight and three-dimensional mass center position using the EKF formulation.
author2 Rogers, Jonathan
author_facet Rogers, Jonathan
Taylor, Bradley Whitten
author Taylor, Bradley Whitten
author_sort Taylor, Bradley Whitten
title Experimental Investigation of Helicopter Weight and Mass Center Estimation
title_short Experimental Investigation of Helicopter Weight and Mass Center Estimation
title_full Experimental Investigation of Helicopter Weight and Mass Center Estimation
title_fullStr Experimental Investigation of Helicopter Weight and Mass Center Estimation
title_full_unstemmed Experimental Investigation of Helicopter Weight and Mass Center Estimation
title_sort experimental investigation of helicopter weight and mass center estimation
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/149488
work_keys_str_mv AT taylorbradleywhitten experimentalinvestigationofhelicopterweightandmasscenterestimation
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