9,328 research outputs found
Control of Complex Dynamic Systems by Neural Networks
This paper considers the use of neural networks (NN's) in controlling a nonlinear, stochastic system with unknown process equations. The NN is used to model the resulting unknown control law. The approach here is based on using the output error of the system to train the NN controller without the need to construct a separate model (NN or other type) for the unknown process dynamics. To implement such a direct adaptive control approach, it is required that connection weights in the NN be estimated while the system is being controlled. As a result of the feedback of the unknown process dynamics, however, it is not possible to determine the gradient of the loss function for use in standard (back-propagation-type) weight estimation algorithms. Therefore, this paper considers the use of a new stochastic approximation algorithm for this weight estimation, which is based on a 'simultaneous perturbation' gradient approximation that only requires the system output error. It is shown that this algorithm can greatly enhance the efficiency over more standard stochastic approximation algorithms based on finite-difference gradient approximations
Control optimization, stabilization and computer algorithms for aircraft applications
The analysis and design of complex multivariable reliable control systems are considered. High performance and fault tolerant aircraft systems are the objectives. A preliminary feasibility study of the design of a lateral control system for a VTOL aircraft that is to land on a DD963 class destroyer under high sea state conditions is provided. Progress in the following areas is summarized: (1) VTOL control system design studies; (2) robust multivariable control system synthesis; (3) adaptive control systems; (4) failure detection algorithms; and (5) fault tolerant optimal control theory
Disturbance Observer-based Robust Control and Its Applications: 35th Anniversary Overview
Disturbance Observer has been one of the most widely used robust control
tools since it was proposed in 1983. This paper introduces the origins of
Disturbance Observer and presents a survey of the major results on Disturbance
Observer-based robust control in the last thirty-five years. Furthermore, it
explains the analysis and synthesis techniques of Disturbance Observer-based
robust control for linear and nonlinear systems by using a unified framework.
In the last section, this paper presents concluding remarks on Disturbance
Observer-based robust control and its engineering applications.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Practical tracking control for stochastic nonlinear systems with polynomial function growth conditions
This paper mainly focuses on an output feedback practical tracking controller design for a class of stochastic nonlinear systems with polynomial function growth conditions. Mostly, there are some studies on an output feedback tracking control problem for general nonlinear systems with polynomial function growth conditions in existing achievements. Moreover, we extend it to stochastic nonlinear systems and construct an output feedback practical tracking controller based on dynamic and static phase combined, ensuring that all the states of the stochastic nonlinear system are bounded and the system tracking error can be made arbitrarily small after some large enough time. Finally, a simulation example is provided to illustrate the efficiency of the theoretical results
Active actuator fault-tolerant control of a wind turbine benchmark model
This paper describes the design of an active fault-tolerant control scheme that is applied to the actuator of a
wind turbine benchmark. The methodology is based on adaptive filters obtained via the nonlinear geometric
approach, which allows to obtain interesting decoupling property with respect to uncertainty affecting the
wind turbine system. The controller accommodation scheme exploits the on-line estimate of the actuator
fault signal generated by the adaptive filters. The nonlinearity of the wind turbine model is described by the
mapping to the power conversion ratio from tip-speed ratio and blade pitch angles. This mapping represents
the aerodynamic uncertainty, and usually is not known in analytical form, but in general represented by
approximated two-dimensional maps (i.e. look-up tables). Therefore, this paper suggests a scheme to
estimate this power conversion ratio in an analytical form by means of a two-dimensional polynomial, which
is subsequently used for designing the active fault-tolerant control scheme. The wind turbine power generating
unit of a grid is considered as a benchmark to show the design procedure, including the aspects of
the nonlinear disturbance decoupling method, as well as the viability of the proposed approach. Extensive
simulations of the benchmark process are practical tools for assessing experimentally the features of the
developed actuator fault-tolerant control scheme, in the presence of modelling and measurement errors.
Comparisons with different fault-tolerant schemes serve to highlight the advantages and drawbacks of the
proposed methodology
On the almost sure central limit theorem for ARX processes in adaptive tracking
The goal of this paper is to highlight the almost sure central limit theorem
for martingales to the control community and to show the usefulness of this
result for the system identification of controllable ARX(p,q) process in
adaptive tracking. We also provide strongly consistent estimators of the even
moments of the driven noise of a controllable ARX(p,q) process as well as
quadratic strong laws for the average costs and estimation errors sequences.
Our theoretical results are illustrated by numerical experiments
A Survey of the Probability Density Function Control for Stochastic Dynamic Systems
Probability density function (PDF) control strategy investigates the controller design approaches in order to to realise a desirable distributions shape control of the random variables for the stochastic processes. Different from the existing stochastic optimisation and control methods, the most important problem of PDF control is to establish the evolution of the PDF expressions of the system variables. Once the relationship between the control input and the output PDF is formulated, the control objective can be described as obtaining the control input signals which would adjust the system output PDFs to follow the pre-specified target PDFs. This paper summarises the recent research results of the PDF control while the controller design approaches can be categorised into three groups: 1) system model-based direct evolution PDF control; 2) model-based distribution-transformation PDF control methods and 3) databased PDF control. In addition, minimum entropy control, PDF-based filter design, fault diagnosis and probabilistic decoupling design are also introduced briefly as extended applications in theory sense
- …