Practical Methodology for the Inclusion of Nonlinear Slosh Damping in the Stability Analysis of Liquid-propelled Space Vehicles
Author(s) -
John Ottander,
Robert A. Hall,
Joseph F. Powers
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
aiaa guidance, navigation and control conference
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2018-2097
Subject(s) - slosh dynamics , control theory (sociology) , engineering , amplitude , vehicle dynamics , thrust , propellant , dissipation , aerospace engineering , physics , computer science , control (management) , quantum mechanics , artificial intelligence , thermodynamics
One of the challenges of developing flight control systems for liquid-propelled space vehicles is ensuring stability and performance in the presence of parasitic minimally damped slosh dynamics in the liquid propellants. This can be especially difficult when the fundamental frequencies of the slosh motions are in proximity to the frequency used for vehicle control. The challenge is partially alleviated since the energy dissipation and effective damping in the slosh modes increases with amplitude. However, traditional launch vehicle control design methodology is performed with linearized systems using a fixed slosh damping corresponding to a slosh motion amplitude based on heritage values. This papers presents a method for performing the control design and analysis using damping at slosh amplitudes chosen based on the resulting limit cycle amplitude of the vehicle thrust vector system due to a control-slosh interaction under degraded phase and gain margin conditions.
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