Ship Motion Control Concepts Considering Actuator Constraints

Numerous motion controllers and autopilots have been proposed over the years. Most control algorithms found in the literature do not explicitly consider saturation constraints for the actuators. In traditional control theory, an ideal controller might achieve perfect reference tracking in simulation...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lyngstadaas, Ole Nikolai
Other Authors: Breivik, Morten, Eske Nørgaard Sørensen, Mikkel
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: NTNU 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2560385
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spelling ftntnutrondheimi:oai:ntnuopen.ntnu.no:11250/2560385 2023-05-15T15:16:17+02:00 Ship Motion Control Concepts Considering Actuator Constraints Lyngstadaas, Ole Nikolai Breivik, Morten Eske Nørgaard Sørensen, Mikkel 2018 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2560385 eng eng NTNU ntnudaim:18654 http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2560385 Kybernetikk og robotikk Navigasjon og fartøystyring Master thesis 2018 ftntnutrondheimi 2019-09-17T06:54:09Z Numerous motion controllers and autopilots have been proposed over the years. Most control algorithms found in the literature do not explicitly consider saturation constraints for the actuators. In traditional control theory, an ideal controller might achieve perfect reference tracking in simulations, having no or non-sufficient limitations on the control input. However, in real-life applications it would not be feasible due to limitations in physical output and wear and tear of the actuators. This thesis presents mathematical modeling of a ship and actuator constraints, and the development and implementation of cascaded feedback controllers, including stability analysis and suggested tuning rules. In addition, a magnitude-rate saturation model is modified to fit ship motion control systems and used to handle actuator constraints. Furthermore, the use of a simplified dynamic window algorithm to handle actuator magnitude constraints for a 3 degrees of freedom dynamic positioning controller for ships, is developed. To accomplish this, a simplified version of the 2 degrees of freedom dynamic window algorithm, where the collision avoidance part of the algorithm is removed, is extended into 3 degrees of freedom. This extended algorithm is then used to design a dynamic window-based controller which guarantees that the velocities remain within a feasible set, while simultaneously respecting the actuator constraints. The controllers are tested through numerical simulations and laboratory experiments in the ocean basin at the Marine Cybernetics Laboratory at NTNU. The model-scale ship C/S Inocean Cat I Arctic Drillship is used for the experiments throughout this thesis, and a set of improvements to its mathematical model is presented. A set of performance metrics are used to evaluate the performance of the different controllers in terms of control accuracy and energy efficiency for both pose and velocity tracking, in addition to actuator wear and tear. In addition, the effects of including the presented magnitude-rate saturation model is thoroughly investigated. Master Thesis Arctic NTNU Open Archive (Norwegian University of Science and Technology) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection NTNU Open Archive (Norwegian University of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftntnutrondheimi
language English
topic Kybernetikk og robotikk
Navigasjon og fartøystyring
spellingShingle Kybernetikk og robotikk
Navigasjon og fartøystyring
Lyngstadaas, Ole Nikolai
Ship Motion Control Concepts Considering Actuator Constraints
topic_facet Kybernetikk og robotikk
Navigasjon og fartøystyring
description Numerous motion controllers and autopilots have been proposed over the years. Most control algorithms found in the literature do not explicitly consider saturation constraints for the actuators. In traditional control theory, an ideal controller might achieve perfect reference tracking in simulations, having no or non-sufficient limitations on the control input. However, in real-life applications it would not be feasible due to limitations in physical output and wear and tear of the actuators. This thesis presents mathematical modeling of a ship and actuator constraints, and the development and implementation of cascaded feedback controllers, including stability analysis and suggested tuning rules. In addition, a magnitude-rate saturation model is modified to fit ship motion control systems and used to handle actuator constraints. Furthermore, the use of a simplified dynamic window algorithm to handle actuator magnitude constraints for a 3 degrees of freedom dynamic positioning controller for ships, is developed. To accomplish this, a simplified version of the 2 degrees of freedom dynamic window algorithm, where the collision avoidance part of the algorithm is removed, is extended into 3 degrees of freedom. This extended algorithm is then used to design a dynamic window-based controller which guarantees that the velocities remain within a feasible set, while simultaneously respecting the actuator constraints. The controllers are tested through numerical simulations and laboratory experiments in the ocean basin at the Marine Cybernetics Laboratory at NTNU. The model-scale ship C/S Inocean Cat I Arctic Drillship is used for the experiments throughout this thesis, and a set of improvements to its mathematical model is presented. A set of performance metrics are used to evaluate the performance of the different controllers in terms of control accuracy and energy efficiency for both pose and velocity tracking, in addition to actuator wear and tear. In addition, the effects of including the presented magnitude-rate saturation model is thoroughly investigated.
author2 Breivik, Morten
Eske Nørgaard Sørensen, Mikkel
format Master Thesis
author Lyngstadaas, Ole Nikolai
author_facet Lyngstadaas, Ole Nikolai
author_sort Lyngstadaas, Ole Nikolai
title Ship Motion Control Concepts Considering Actuator Constraints
title_short Ship Motion Control Concepts Considering Actuator Constraints
title_full Ship Motion Control Concepts Considering Actuator Constraints
title_fullStr Ship Motion Control Concepts Considering Actuator Constraints
title_full_unstemmed Ship Motion Control Concepts Considering Actuator Constraints
title_sort ship motion control concepts considering actuator constraints
publisher NTNU
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2560385
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation ntnudaim:18654
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2560385
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