13,496 research outputs found
The Control of Discrete-Time Uncertain Dynamical Systems
In this project we use the second method of Lyapunov to develop several controllers to stabilize discrete-time dynamical systems with or without parameter uncertainties and/or external disturbances. We also use the notion of a sliding mode on a preferred hyperplane, previously developed for continuous-time variable structure control systems, to stabilize discrete- time dynamical systems. In particular, feedback controllers are proposed that: (i) stabilize discrete systems with no uncertainties by forcing their state trajectories onto prespecified hyperplanes; (ii) provide a needed level of stability robustness to discrete systems with uncertainties which are modeled by cone bounded functions; (iii) robustly stabilize discrete uncertain systems
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
Decentralised delay-dependent static output feedback variable structure control
In this paper, an output feedback stabilisation problem is considered for a class of large scale interconnected time delay systems with uncertainties. The uncertainties appear in both isolated subsystems and interconnections. The bounds on the uncertainties are nonlinear and time delayed. It is not required that either the known interconnections or the uncertain interconnections are matched. Then, a decentralised delay-dependant static output feedback variable structure control is synthesised to stabilise the system globally uniformly asymptotically using the Lyapunov Razumikhin approach. A case study relating to a river pollution control problem is presented to illustrate the proposed approach
Memory Resilient Gain-scheduled State-Feedback Control of Uncertain LTI/LPV Systems with Time-Varying Delays
The stabilization of uncertain LTI/LPV time delay systems with time varying
delays by state-feedback controllers is addressed. At the difference of other
works in the literature, the proposed approach allows for the synthesis of
resilient controllers with respect to uncertainties on the implemented delay.
It is emphasized that such controllers unify memoryless and exact-memory
controllers usually considered in the literature. The solutions to the
stability and stabilization problems are expressed in terms of LMIs which allow
to check the stability of the closed-loop system for a given bound on the
knowledge error and even optimize the uncertainty radius under some performance
constraints; in this paper, the performance measure is
considered. The interest of the approach is finally illustrated through several
examples
Adaptive Discrete Second Order Sliding Mode Control with Application to Nonlinear Automotive Systems
Sliding mode control (SMC) is a robust and computationally efficient
model-based controller design technique for highly nonlinear systems, in the
presence of model and external uncertainties. However, the implementation of
the conventional continuous-time SMC on digital computers is limited, due to
the imprecisions caused by data sampling and quantization, and the chattering
phenomena, which results in high frequency oscillations. One effective solution
to minimize the effects of data sampling and quantization imprecisions is the
use of higher order sliding modes. To this end, in this paper, a new
formulation of an adaptive second order discrete sliding mode control (DSMC) is
presented for a general class of multi-input multi-output (MIMO) uncertain
nonlinear systems. Based on a Lyapunov stability argument and by invoking the
new Invariance Principle, not only the asymptotic stability of the controller
is guaranteed, but also the adaptation law is derived to remove the
uncertainties within the nonlinear plant dynamics. The proposed adaptive
tracking controller is designed and tested in real-time for a highly nonlinear
control problem in spark ignition combustion engine during transient operating
conditions. The simulation and real-time processor-in-the-loop (PIL) test
results show that the second order single-input single-output (SISO) DSMC can
improve the tracking performances up to 90%, compared to a first order SISO
DSMC under sampling and quantization imprecisions, in the presence of modeling
uncertainties. Moreover, it is observed that by converting the engine SISO
controllers to a MIMO structure, the overall controller performance can be
enhanced by 25%, compared to the SISO second order DSMC, because of the
dynamics coupling consideration within the MIMO DSMC formulation.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, 1 tabl
Delay-independent decentralised output feedback control for large-scale systems with nonlinear interconnections
In this paper, a stabilisation problem for a class of large-scale systems with nonlinear interconnections is considered. All the uncertainties are nonlinear and are subject to the effects of time delay. A decentralised static output feedback variable structure control is synthesised and the stability of the corresponding closed-loop system is analysed based on the Lyapunov Razumikhin approach. A set of conditions is developed to guarantee that the large-scale interconnected system is stabilised uniformly asymptotically. Further study shows that the conservatism can be reduced by employing additive controllers if the known interconnections are separated into matched and mismatched parts. It is not required that the subsystems are square. The designed controller is independent of time delay and thus it does not require memory. Simulation results show the effectiveness of the proposed approach
Discrete-time output feedback sliding-mode control design for uncertain systems using linear matrix inequalities
An output feedback-based sliding-mode control design methodology for discrete-time systems is considered in this article. In previous work, it has been shown that by identifying a minimal set of current and past outputs, an augmented system can be obtained which permits the design of a sliding surface based upon output information only, if the invariant zeros of this augmented system are stable. In this work, a procedure for realising discrete-time controllers via a particular set of extended outputs is presented for non-square systems with uncertainties. This method is applicable when unstable invariant zeros are present in the original system. The conditions for existence of a sliding manifold guaranteeing a stable sliding motion are given. A procedure to obtain a Lyapunov matrix, which simultaneously satisfies both a Riccati inequality and a structural constraint, is used to formulate the corresponding control to solve the reachability problem. A numerical method using linear matrix inequalities is suggested to obtain the Lyapunov matrix. Finally, the design approach given in this article is applied to an aircraft problem and the use of the method as a reconfigurable control strategy in the presence of sensor failure is demonstrated
Decentralised reliable guaranteed cost control of uncertain systems: an LMI design
© 2007 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes,creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.The problem of designing a decentralised control scheme for a class of linear large scale interconnected systems with norm-bounded time-varying parameter uncertainties under a class of control failures is addressed. These failures are described by a model that considers possible outages or partial failures in every single actuator of each decentralised controller. The control design is performed through two steps. First, a decentralised reliable guaranteed cost control set is derived and, second, a feasible linear matrix inequalities procedure is presented for the effective construction of the control set. A numerical example illustrates the efficiency of the proposed control schemePeer ReviewedPostprint (published version
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