Techniques for Accommodating Control Effector Failures on a Mildly Statically Unstable Airplane

Commercial airplanes are becoming increasingly more sophisticated, placing an increasing burden on pilots to detect and resolve the exhaustive set of possible control effector failures. Automatic techniques are needed to either reconfigure an existing control law or restructure a new control law after failure. A discrete control law has been designed for the longitudinal channel of a mildly statically unstable commercial airplane, to track the glideslope during the approach to landing phase of flight. Single effector failures with time delays for failure detection and identification are analyzed for both the reconfigured and restructured control laws, and results are compared with those from previous research using a statically stable airplane. Strategies considered include reconfiguration and restructuring with new flight conditions. Validation of all cases is made using a 6 DOF nonlinear airplane simulation.