141 research outputs found

    Decentralised control for complex systems - An invited survey

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    © 2014 Inderscience Enterprises Ltd. With the advancement of science and technology, practical systems are becoming more complex. Decentralised control has been recognised as a practical, feasible and powerful tool for application to large scale interconnected systems. In this paper, past and recent results relating to decentralised control of complex large scale interconnected systems are reviewed. Decentralised control based on modern control approaches such as variable structure techniques, adaptive control and backstepping approaches are discussed. It is well known that system structure can be employed to reduce conservatism in the control design and decentralised control for interconnected systems with similar and symmetric structure is explored. Decentralised control of singular large scale systems is also reviewed in this paper

    Decentralized adaptive neural network control of interconnected nonlinear dynamical systems with application to power system

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    Traditional nonlinear techniques cannot be directly applicable to control large scale interconnected nonlinear dynamic systems due their sheer size and unavailability of system dynamics. Therefore, in this dissertation, the decentralized adaptive neural network (NN) control of a class of nonlinear interconnected dynamic systems is introduced and its application to power systems is presented in the form of six papers. In the first paper, a new nonlinear dynamical representation in the form of a large scale interconnected system for a power network free of algebraic equations with multiple UPFCs as nonlinear controllers is presented. Then, oscillation damping for UPFCs using adaptive NN control is discussed by assuming that the system dynamics are known. Subsequently, the dynamic surface control (DSC) framework is proposed in continuous-time not only to overcome the need for the subsystem dynamics and interconnection terms, but also to relax the explosion of complexity problem normally observed in traditional backstepping. The application of DSC-based decentralized control of power system with excitation control is shown in the third paper. On the other hand, a novel adaptive NN-based decentralized controller for a class of interconnected discrete-time systems with unknown subsystem and interconnection dynamics is introduced since discrete-time is preferred for implementation. The application of the decentralized controller is shown on a power network. Next, a near optimal decentralized discrete-time controller is introduced in the fifth paper for such systems in affine form whereas the sixth paper proposes a method for obtaining the L2-gain near optimal control while keeping a tradeoff between accuracy and computational complexity. Lyapunov theory is employed to assess the stability of the controllers --Abstract, page iv

    Decentralized Control for Large-Scale Interconnected Nonlinear Systems Based on Barrier Lyapunov Function

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    We present a novel decentralized tracking control scheme for a class of large-scale nonlinear systems with partial state constraints. For the first time, backstepping design with the newly proposed BLF is incorporated to effectively deal with the control problem of nonlinear systems with interconnected constraints. To prevent the states of each subsystem from violating the constraints, we employ a special barrier Lyapunov function (BLF), which grows to infinity whenever its argument approaches some finite limits. By ensuring boundedness of the barrier Lyapunov function in the closed loop, we ensure that those limits are not transgressed. Asymptotic tracking is achieved without violation of the constraints, and all closed-loop signals remain bounded. In the end, an illustrative example is presented to demonstrate the performance of the proposed control

    A novel nussbaum functions based adaptive event-triggered asymptotic tracking control of stochastic nonlinear systems with strong interconnections

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    In this work, the issue of event-triggered-based asymptotic tracking adaptive control of stochastic nonlinear systems in pure-feedback form with strong interconnections is considered. First, a new decentralized control scheme is developed by introducing the new types of Nussbaum functions, which enables the output of each subsystem to asymptotically track the desired reference signal. Second, the nonaffine structures and the unknown control gains existing in the nonlinear systems are a part of the considered system model, which makes it more complicated to design the decentralized controllers. Therefore, the complexity caused by the nonaffine structures is faciliated by mean value theorem and the unknown control gains are handled by a novel Nussbaum function in our proposed design scheme. Meanwhile, the unknown nonlinearities of the system are approximated by using intelligent control technology. Furthermore, an event-triggered method is introduced in the design process to save communication resources effectively. It is shown that all signals of the closed-loop systems are bounded in probability and the tracking errors asymptotically converge to zero in probability. Finally, the simulation results illustrate the effectivity of the presented scheme

    Adaptive control of uncertain nonlinear systems with quantized input signal

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    Power system damping controllers design using a backstepping control technique

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    The objective of this dissertation is to design and coordinate controllers that will enhance transient stability of power systems subject to large disturbances. Two specific classes of controllers have been investigated, the first one is a type of supplementary signals added to the excitation systems of the generating units, and the second is a type of damping signal added to a device called a Static Var Compensator that can be placed at any node in the system. To address a wide range of operating conditions, a nonlinear control design technique, called backstepping control, is used. While these two types of controllers improve the dynamic performance significantly, a coordination of these controllers is even more promising. Control coordination is presented in two parts. First part concerns simultaneous optimization of selected control gains of exciter and SVC in coping with the complex nature of power systems. Second part proposes a combination of reinforcement learning and a backstepping control technique for excitation control system. The reinforcement learning progressively learns and adapts the backstepping control gains to handle a wide range of operating conditions. Results show that the proposed control technique provides better damping than conventional power system stabilizers and backstepping fixed gain controllers

    Methods of pre-identification of TITO systems

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    The content of this article is the presentation of methods used to identify systems before actual control, namely decentralized control of systems with Two Inputs, Two Outputs (TITO) and with two interactions. First, theoretical assumptions and reasons for using these methods are given. Subsequently, two methods for systems identification are described. At the end of this article, these specific methods are presented as the pre-identification of the chosen example. The Introduction part of the paper deals with the description of decentralized control, adaptive control, decentralized control in robotics and problem formulation (fixing the identification time at the existing decentralized self-tuning controller at the beginning of control and at the beginning of any set-point change) with the goal of a new method of identification. The Materials and methods section describes the used decentralized control method, recursive identification using approximation polynomials and least-squares with directional forgetting, recursive instrumental variable, self-tuning controller and suboptimal quadratic tracking controller, so all methods described in the section are those ones that already exist. Another section, named Assumptions, newly formulates the necessary background information, such as decentralized controllability and the system model, for the new identification method formulated in Pre-identification section. This section is followed by a section showing the results obtained by simulations and in real-time on a Coupled Drives model in the laboratory. © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.European Regional Development Fund under the project CEBIA-Tech [CZ.1.05/2.1.00/03.0089]; Ministry of Education, Science, research and Sport of the Slovak Republic [1247/2018]Ministerstvo školstva, vedy, výskumu a športu Slovenskej republiky; European Regional Development Fund, ERDF: CZ.1.05/2.1.00/03.008

    An Adaptive Dynamic Surface Controller for Ultralow Altitude Airdrop Flight Path Angle with Actuator Input Nonlinearity

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    In the process of ultralow altitude airdrop, many factors such as actuator input dead-zone, backlash, uncertain external atmospheric disturbance, and model unknown nonlinearity affect the precision of trajectory tracking. In response, a robust adaptive neural network dynamic surface controller is developed. As a result, the aircraft longitudinal dynamics with actuator input nonlinearity is derived; the unknown nonlinear model functions are approximated by means of the RBF neural network. Also, an adaption strategy is used to achieve robustness against model uncertainties. Finally, it has been proved that all the signals in the closed-loop system are bounded and the tracking error converges to a small residual set asymptotically. Simulation results demonstrate the perfect tracking performance and strong robustness of the proposed method, which is not only applicable to the actuator with input dead-zone but also suitable for the backlash nonlinearity. At the same time, it can effectively overcome the effects of dead-zone and the atmospheric disturbance on the system and ensure the fast track of the desired flight path angle instruction, which overthrows the assumption that system functions must be known

    Global Stabilization of Triangular Systems with Time-Delayed Dynamic Input Perturbations

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    A control design approach is developed for a general class of uncertain strict-feedback-like nonlinear systems with dynamic uncertain input nonlinearities with time delays. The system structure considered in this paper includes a nominal uncertain strict-feedback-like subsystem, the input signal to which is generated by an uncertain nonlinear input unmodeled dynamics that is driven by the entire system state (including unmeasured state variables) and is also allowed to depend on time delayed versions of the system state variable and control input signals. The system also includes additive uncertain nonlinear functions, coupled nonlinear appended dynamics, and uncertain dynamic input nonlinearities with time-varying uncertain time delays. The proposed control design approach provides a globally stabilizing delay-independent robust adaptive output-feedback dynamic controller based on a dual dynamic high-gain scaling based structure.Comment: 2017 IEEE International Carpathian Control Conference (ICCC
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