Never landing drone: Autonomous soaring of a unmanned aerial vehicle in front of a moving obstacle

Chris P.L. de Jong, Bart D.W. Remes*, Sunyou Hwang, Christophe De Wagter

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)
92 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Increasing endurance is a major challenge for battery-powered aerial vehicles. A method is presented which makes use of an updraft around obstacles to decrease the power consumption of a fixed-wing unmanned aerial vehicle. A soaring flight controller has been developed that can autonomously soar while the unmanned aerial vehicle keeps its relative position to that of a moving object. Multiple simulations have been performed to analyse the limitations of the soaring controller under different conditions. The effect of a change in wind velocity and updraft has been analysed. The simulations showed that an increase in updraft decreases the energy consumption of the flight controller. An increase in wind velocity results in a higher updraft requirement, while a decrease in the wind velocity requires less updraft. The simulations achieved sustained flight at 0% throttle. The controller has been validated experimentally using the updraft generated by a moving ship. The practical, autonomous tests reduced the average throttle down to 4.5% in front of a ship. The method presented in this study achieved successful hovering flight using an energy control module for longitudinal positioning.

Original languageEnglish
Number of pages12
JournalInternational Journal of Micro Air Vehicles
Volume13
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Keywords

  • fixed-wing
  • flight control
  • orographic lift
  • practical tests
  • simulation
  • Soaring
  • updraft

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