Abstract: Design and optimization of the propulsion system is a crucial task of the ship design process. The behaviour of the propulsion system, in transient conditions as well as in steady state, is greatly affected by the capability of the control system to manage the available power and to achieve the desired performance in the shortest time. The selection of a proper control scheme is a trade-off between different and conflicting needs. Two of the opposites are: increasing the ship operability by adding more functions and more controls; and reducing the control system development and installation time and cost. In this paper, the rapid prototyping and testing procedure for the development of the propulsion controller of the new Italian aircraft carrier Cavour is presented, using real-time hardware-in-the-loop (RT-HIL) simulation. The procedure is based on a wide use of simulation technology. First, a complete dynamical model of the ship propulsion plant was developed. Then, batch simulation was used to develop the best possible control scheme. Finally, RT-HIL simulation was used to debug the real controller software and to tune the controller parameters before sea trials. The application of the procedure led to a significant reduction in the development phase of the controller design. Furthermore, the adoption of the RT-HIL technology greatly reduced the time spent to tune the control system during the ship delivery phase.

Real-time simulation of a COGAG naval ship propulsion system

ALTOSOLE, MARCO;BENVENUTO, GIOVANNI BATTISTA;FIGARI, MASSIMO;CAMPORA, UGO
2009-01-01

Abstract

Abstract: Design and optimization of the propulsion system is a crucial task of the ship design process. The behaviour of the propulsion system, in transient conditions as well as in steady state, is greatly affected by the capability of the control system to manage the available power and to achieve the desired performance in the shortest time. The selection of a proper control scheme is a trade-off between different and conflicting needs. Two of the opposites are: increasing the ship operability by adding more functions and more controls; and reducing the control system development and installation time and cost. In this paper, the rapid prototyping and testing procedure for the development of the propulsion controller of the new Italian aircraft carrier Cavour is presented, using real-time hardware-in-the-loop (RT-HIL) simulation. The procedure is based on a wide use of simulation technology. First, a complete dynamical model of the ship propulsion plant was developed. Then, batch simulation was used to develop the best possible control scheme. Finally, RT-HIL simulation was used to debug the real controller software and to tune the controller parameters before sea trials. The application of the procedure led to a significant reduction in the development phase of the controller design. Furthermore, the adoption of the RT-HIL technology greatly reduced the time spent to tune the control system during the ship delivery phase.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11567/267471
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