Model-Reference Adaptive Flight Control of a 95-mg Insect-Scale Flapping-Wing Aerial Robot
arXiv:2605.08525v2 Announce Type: replace Abstract: Due to the system's scale and complex fabrication, the model describing the dynamics of a flapping-wing insect-scale aerial robot is subject to parameter uncertainty; for example, in the inertia matrix and the actuator mapping of the flier. Furthermore, due to its low inertia, this type of robot is greatly affected by stochastic and systematic disturbances during flight, including power-wire tension, gusts, and undesired aerodynamic forces pro
Model-Reference Adaptive Flight Control of a 95-mg Insect-Scale Flapping-Wing Aerial Robot
Overview
arXiv:2605.08525v2 Announce Type: replace Abstract: Due to the system's scale and complex fabrication, the model describing the dynamics of a flapping-wing insect-scale aerial robot is subject to parameter uncertainty; for example, in the inertia matrix and the actuator mapping of the flier. Furthermore, due to its low inertia, this type of robot is greatly affected by stochastic and systematic disturbances during flight, including power-wire tension, gusts, and undesired aerodynamic forces produced by wing misalignment. Therefore, the high-performance execution of complex maneuvers at the subdecigram scale requires the robot to adapt its behavior to counteract disturbances and model uncertainty. Toward this objective, we introduce a model-reference adaptive control (MRAC) architecture for high-performance position control of flapping-wing robotic insects that can be modeled as rigid bodies in the three-dimensional (3D) space. In addition, we demonstrate how the implementation of a hybrid multiplicative extended K\'alm\'an filter for estimating current and desired angular velocities during flight significantly dampens attitude vibrations, especially along the roll and pitch degrees of freedom (DOFs), and also improves flight performance. To show the suitability, functionality, and high performance of the proposed approach, we conducted real-time hovering and trajectory-tracking 6-DOF flight control experiments with a 95-mg insect-scale aerial robot.
Source
Originally published at arxiv.org.
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Source: https://arxiv.org/abs/2605.08525