16,683 research outputs found
Global Stabilization of Triangular Systems with Time-Delayed Dynamic Input Perturbations
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
Design of generalized minimum variance controllers for nonlinear multivariable systems
The design and implementation of Generalized Minimum Variance control laws for nonlinear multivariable systems that can include severe nonlinearities is considered. The quadratic cost index minimised involves dynamically weighted error and nonlinear control signal costing terms. The aim here is to show the controller obtained is simple to design and implement. The features of the control law are explored. The controller obtained includes an internal model of the process and in one form is a nonlinear version of the Smith Predictor
An Overview of Integral Quadratic Constraints for Delayed Nonlinear and Parameter-Varying Systems
A general framework is presented for analyzing the stability and performance
of nonlinear and linear parameter varying (LPV) time delayed systems. First,
the input/output behavior of the time delay operator is bounded in the
frequency domain by integral quadratic constraints (IQCs). A constant delay is
a linear, time-invariant system and this leads to a simple, intuitive
interpretation for these frequency domain constraints. This simple
interpretation is used to derive new IQCs for both constant and varying delays.
Second, the performance of nonlinear and LPV delayed systems is bounded using
dissipation inequalities that incorporate IQCs. This step makes use of recent
results that show, under mild technical conditions, that an IQC has an
equivalent representation as a finite-horizon time-domain constraint. Numerical
examples are provided to demonstrate the effectiveness of the method for both
class of systems
Temperature Regulation in Multicore Processors Using Adjustable-Gain Integral Controllers
This paper considers the problem of temperature regulation in multicore
processors by dynamic voltage-frequency scaling. We propose a feedback law that
is based on an integral controller with adjustable gain, designed for fast
tracking convergence in the face of model uncertainties, time-varying plants,
and tight computing-timing constraints. Moreover, unlike prior works we
consider a nonlinear, time-varying plant model that trades off precision for
simple and efficient on-line computations. Cycle-level, full system simulator
implementation and evaluation illustrates fast and accurate tracking of given
temperature reference values, and compares favorably with fixed-gain
controllers.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, IEEE Conference on Control Applications 2015,
Accepted Versio
Cooperative Adaptive Control for Cloud-Based Robotics
This paper studies collaboration through the cloud in the context of
cooperative adaptive control for robot manipulators. We first consider the case
of multiple robots manipulating a common object through synchronous centralized
update laws to identify unknown inertial parameters. Through this development,
we introduce a notion of Collective Sufficient Richness, wherein parameter
convergence can be enabled through teamwork in the group. The introduction of
this property and the analysis of stable adaptive controllers that benefit from
it constitute the main new contributions of this work. Building on this
original example, we then consider decentralized update laws, time-varying
network topologies, and the influence of communication delays on this process.
Perhaps surprisingly, these nonidealized networked conditions inherit the same
benefits of convergence being determined through collective effects for the
group. Simple simulations of a planar manipulator identifying an unknown load
are provided to illustrate the central idea and benefits of Collective
Sufficient Richness.Comment: ICRA 201
Integrated chaos generators
This paper surveys the different design issues, from mathematical model to silicon, involved on the design of integrated circuits for the generation of chaotic behavior.Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología 1FD97-1611(TIC)European Commission ESPRIT 3110
Feedback control by online learning an inverse model
A model, predictor, or error estimator is often used by a feedback controller to control a plant. Creating such a model is difficult when the plant exhibits nonlinear behavior. In this paper, a novel online learning control framework is proposed that does not require explicit knowledge about the plant. This framework uses two learning modules, one for creating an inverse model, and the other for actually controlling the plant. Except for their inputs, they are identical. The inverse model learns by the exploration performed by the not yet fully trained controller, while the actual controller is based on the currently learned model. The proposed framework allows fast online learning of an accurate controller. The controller can be applied on a broad range of tasks with different dynamic characteristics. We validate this claim by applying our control framework on several control tasks: 1) the heating tank problem (slow nonlinear dynamics); 2) flight pitch control (slow linear dynamics); and 3) the balancing problem of a double inverted pendulum (fast linear and nonlinear dynamics). The results of these experiments show that fast learning and accurate control can be achieved. Furthermore, a comparison is made with some classical control approaches, and observations concerning convergence and stability are made
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