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High Precision Shape Control of the 35-m NIS Reflector. Houfei Fang Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology. NEXRAD in Space (NIS) Workshop. University of Miami/Rosenstiel School for Marine and Atmospheric Science. April 10-11, 2007. Outline. Introduction
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High Precision Shape Control of the 35-m NIS Reflector Houfei Fang Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology NEXRAD in Space (NIS) Workshop University of Miami/Rosenstiel School for Marine and Atmospheric Science April 10-11, 2007
Outline • Introduction • State-of-the-Art Sensing Approaches • State-of-the-Art Actuation Approaches • Numerical Results and Recommendations
Introduction Overall Goal • Have performed a feasibility study of high precision control of the 35-M spherical reflector to assess development efforts to achieve NIS reflector requirements Problem Statement • The 35-M Spherical Reflector has extremely stringent requirements – • Large size (35 m diameter), high surface accuracy (0.17 mm), light weight, etc. • Exceed current state of the art of large space reflectors • Without active control, the NIS requirements may not be feasible to achieve
In-Space Thermal Disturbances Different Orbital Positions Different Temperature Distributions
Outline • Introduction • State-of-the-Art Sensing Approaches • State-of-the-Art Actuation Approaches • Numerical Results and Recommendations
State-of-the-Art Sensing Approaches: Photogrammetry • Photogrammetry • Provides global surface deformations • Absolute surface measurement • Accuracy depends on surface targets (number, size and contrast) • Up to 0.06 mm resolution in gossamer membrane experiment [Black & Pappa, 2004] Photogrammetry Setup
State-of-the-Art Sensing Approaches: Focal-plane Metrology Focal-plane Metrology • Focal-plane Metrology • Phase retrieval at or near the focal plane • It is simple, only a probe light and a receiving image detector are required • A fiber imaging bundle can be used to convey the focal plane image to a camera installed elsewhere in the system
State-of-the-Art Sensing Approaches: Focus Diversity Phase Retrieval Focus Diversity Phase Retrieval • Focus Diversity Phase Retrieval • Uses a number of defocused images to extract the phase information • This concept has been demonstrated and employed by NGST • This concept requires moving the camera in and out of focus
State-of-the-Art Sensing Approaches: Shack-Hartmann Sensor Shack-Hartmann Sensor • Shack-Hartmann Sensor • It uses a lenslet array to subdivide the wavefront • Each subset of the wavefront forms a focus on the detector behind the microlens, • It provides information about the local tip/tilt of the wavefront • A Shack-Hartmann sensor produces 1:1 mapping of the wavefront under investigation
Outline • Introduction • State-of-the-Art Sensing Approaches • State-of-the-Art Actuation Approaches • Numerical Results and Recommendations
State-of-the-Art Actuation Approaches: Boundary Control Displacement from boundary inputs on 0.5m Membrane [Lindler & Flint, 2004] • Very low bending stiffness gives transverse boundary inputs large shape-control authority (radial, tangential & transverse boundary inputs) • Attractive for large 35m diameter application since number of actuators needed scales linearly with circumference, not area • Experiments have been performed on 0.5-m plate with jack-screw boundary inputs [Lindler & Flint, 2004]
Piezoelectric Bimorph Membrane Charge deposited on front by electron-gun cathode ray Distributed Anode on back side Electron Gun Applied Potential Deflection Plates State-of-the-Art Actuation Approaches: Piezoelectric Polymer Films Electron gun shape-controlled PVDF thin-film reflector concept [Main et. al., 2000] • Utilizes continuous piezoelectric polymer film patches such as PVDF applied on one side of reflector to enable direct actuation of surface • Piezoelectric circuit completed via a non-contact electron gun • Cathode ray generates localized strain in PVDF and reflector surface in vicinity of electron-beam flux • Electron-beam steering enable global shape control • Eliminates extensive wiring needed for standard distributed piezo arrays
Large Scale Net Shape Membrane Deployable Thin Film Electrode Elements High Voltage Power Supply and Control System Lightweight Astromesh Structure State-of-the-Art Actuation Approaches: Out of Plane Electrostatic • Out of Plane Electrostatic (SRS Technologies) • Successfully Demonstrated 5-Meter Lightweight Deployable Electrostatic Backing Structure Under SRS/Northrop Research Program • High Voltage Power Supply and Control Demonstrated • Large Dynamic Range Shape Control
State-of-the-Art Actuation Approaches: Gore/Seam with Shape Memory Alloy Cables Gore/seam cable actuated shape control of inflated precision gossamer reflectors – Assessment study [DeSmidt, Wang & Fang, 2006] • Fabrication of seamless 35-m gossamer reflector very challenging, most likely will be fabricated with gore/seaming • This strategy takes advantage of seams to facilitate better spatial distribution of actuators across the membrane to allow greater control authority without affecting deployablity • Proposes to utilize tendon-like actuators, such as Shape Memory Alloy (SMA) based cables, to adjust tension at the gore/seam boundaries to implement shape control
State-of-the-Art Actuation Approaches: Electroactive Polymer Patch Shape Control with EAP Patch [Fang, Pattom, Wang, & Im, 2007] • Electroactive polymer (EAP) actuators are attached to the back of the reflector to produce contraction/expansion forces • EAP actuator is very thin and flexible, it can be implemented to the membrane reflector without significant weight penalty and packaging difficulty • EAP exhibits an exceptionally high electrostrictive strain with low hysteresis
Outline • Introduction • State-of-the-Art Sensing Approaches • State-of-the-Art Actuation Approaches • Numerical Results and Recommendations
Z F d Sensor Measurements Integrated Reflector/Actuator Y Sensors System Vcntrl V Least-Squares Shape Control Saturation Vmax weff Analytical Model Sensor Measurement Locations • Control inputs, patch actuator voltages, V • Sensor measurement vector, Y,(grid of surface measurements) • Least-Squares shape control minimizes objective function,J • Saturation block accounts for PVDF voltage saturation effects Control Law Objective Function System Transfer Matrix
4 Loading Condition: Uniform Temperature Deviation, T0=20 K Plus Temperature Gradient, T=20 K 3.5 3 2.5 wRMS, mm 2 1.5 1 RMS Error Tolerance 0.5 0 312 P 480 P 624 P 52 C 104 C 312 P 480 P 624 P 312 P 480 P 624 P 52 C 52 C 52 C 104 C 104 C 104 C Actuator Configuration, (P = Patches, C = Cables) Patch Control Cable Control Patch+Cable Control Performance Comparison Thermal Loading: Uniform + Gradient Only Hybrid approach can satisfy error tolerance
40 624p 104c Actuator Configuration: P = Patches C = Cables 35 480p 104c 30 624p 52c 25 312p 104c |T0|max , K 480p 52c 20 624p 0c 312p 52c 15 480p 0c 10 312p 0c 5 30 40 50 60 70 80 Control System Mass, kg Performance Comparison Mass of Control System Max Allowable Uniform Thermal Load, K • From the control system weight point-of-view, the hybrid patch/cable approach outperforms “patch only” and “cable only” approaches • Results are similar for Gradient and W-error cases
Pros and Cons of different Actuation Technologies • Boundary Control • Not effective for controlling shape at intermediate radial locations • EAP Patch Control • High precision (higher modal controllability compared to cable control) • Limited force capability (limited by saturation) • Higher control voltages compared to cable control • Gore-Seam Cable Control • Large force capability • Lightweight compared with patch control • Precision limited • Hybrid Patch/Gore-Seam Cable Control (Overall the Best Approach) • High precision (due to patches) • High force capability (due to cables) • Most weight efficient design • More complex than patches and cables alone
Recommended Follow-On Studies • Light-weight in-space deployable reflector and reflector material • Reduce the material Coefficient of Thermal Expansion (CTE) • Implementation of gore/seam cable control • Develop shape memory alloy (SMA) based cable technology • Development of EAP patch control • Study of new P(VDF-HFP) copolymers for better actuation • Explore new P(VDF-TrFE) terpolymers for order of magnitude better performance • Investigate the possibility of multi-layer (2 to 3 layers) actuator • Control scheme and analytical model advancement • Develop advanced control scheme to accommodate advanced actuator and metrology technologies • Design tool advancement • For optimized spatial distribution of actuators for maximum performance and minimum weight • Metrology system • High resolution, large dynamic range and easy to implement