Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5472662 Aerospace Science and Technology 2017 14 Pages PDF
Abstract
A turboprop transport Flight Data Recorder data indicates that attempt to recover from the stalled conditions has failed, even though the pitch angle is continuously pushed nose-down in accordance with the published stall-recovery technique. The present study is to examine the reasons for the angle of attack being increased in the first place and not being reduced after stall, even though the longitudinal control is set to nose-down. Fuzzy Logic models are used to preserve nonlinear and unsteady aerodynamic effects. It is found that the increasing angle of attack is initially caused by the nose-up pitching moment due to inertial coupling. In the subsequent nose-down control attempt for stall recovery, the stall angles of attack are still increasingly higher because the pitch rate relative to the rotating axes stays mostly positive. The present simulation study is based on a new method to be called “Fuzzy-Logic Dynamic Inversion,” where desired dynamics with reduced Euler angles and angular rates are specified; while the required control inputs in elevator, aileron and rudder are determined, all through Fuzzy Logic models. Results in elevator, aileron and rudder controls are illustrated to demonstrate the possibility of stall recovery and accident prevention. It is shown that if at the first sign of stall in icing and crosswind flight conditions, and the landing is aborted, stall recovery is possible by applying proper control inputs simultaneously about three control axes to reduce the moments of inertial coupling and the roll and pitch angles.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Aerospace Engineering
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