Owing to its large flexible envelope, an airship is highly sensitive to environmental disturbances, such as wind gusts. Fluid–structure interaction induces structural deformation, which modifies the aerodynamic force distribution and introduces additional coupling effects. Furthermore, servo-elastic deformation alters the position and orientation of actuators mounted on the envelope, resulting in deviations between commanded and actual control forces. To address these issues, a composite control strategy integrating trajectory tracking and active elastic deformation suppression is proposed for a flexible airship equipped with multiple vectored propellers. Structural flexibility is explicitly incorporated into the dynamic model through modal decomposition, where the generalized coordinates and their time derivatives associated with deformation modes are included in the system state vector. A disturbance observer is developed to estimate actuator-level force deviations induced by elastic deformation, and the estimated disturbances are compensated in real time. Based on this formulation, a composite control framework, referred to as servo-elastic control, is established. The framework consists of a trajectory tracking controller and a displacement compensation module to achieve simultaneous motion regulation and structural deflection suppression. Numerical results demonstrate that the displacement at vectored thrust actuator attachment points is reduced to approximately 10% of that obtained using a trajectory tracking controller alone. The proposed method achieves significant deformation suppression without degrading position tracking performance, thereby enhancing control effectiveness and system stability of flexible airships.
Chen et al. (Sun,) studied this question.