Feedback passivity approach to output feedback disturbance attenuation for uncertain nonlinear systems

2004 ◽  
Vol 35 (8) ◽  
pp. 467-477 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. I. Son * ◽  
J. W. Yang ◽  
N. H. Jo ◽  
H. Shim ◽  
J. H. Seo
2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Weiyong Yu ◽  
Fangfang Zhang

The problem of output feedback disturbance attenuation is investigated for a class of uncertain nonlinear systems. The uncertainties of the considered systems are bounded by unmeasured states with growth rate function of output and input multiplying an unknown constant. Based on a dynamic gain observer, an adaptive output feedback controller is proposed such that the states of the closed-loop system are globally bounded, and the disturbance attenuation is achieved in theL2-gain sense. An example is provided to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed design scheme.


1999 ◽  
Vol 121 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-57 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Egemen Tezcan ◽  
Tamer Bas¸ar

We present a systematic procedure for designing H∞-optimal adaptive controllers for a class of single-input single-output parametric strict-feedback nonlinear systems that are in the output-feedback form. The uncertain nonlinear system is minimum phase with a known relative degree and known sign of the high-frequency gain. We use soft projection on the parameter estimates to keep them bounded in the absence of persistent excitations. The objective is to obtain disturbance attenuating output-feedback controllers which will track a smooth bounded trajectory and keep all closed-loop signals bounded in the presence of exogenous disturbances. Two recent papers (Pan and Bas¸ar, 1996a; Marino and Tomei, 1995) addressed a similar problem with full state information, using two different approaches, and obtained asymptotically tracking and disturbance-attenuating adaptive controllers. Here, we extend these results to the output measurement case for a class of minimum phase nonlinear systems where the nonlinearities depend only on the measured output. It is shown that arbitrarily small disturbance attenuation levels can be obtained at the expense of increased control effort. The backstepping methodology, cost-to-come function based H∞ -filtering and singular perturbations analysis constitute the framework of our robust adaptive control design scheme.


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