Two-Time Scale Control and Observer Design for Trajectory Tracking of Two Cooperating Robot Manipulators Moving a Flexible Beam

Author(s):  
Ali Tavasoli ◽  
Mohammad Eghtesad ◽  
Hamed Jafarian
2008 ◽  
Vol 130 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amir Lotfazar ◽  
Mohammad Eghtesad ◽  
Ali Najafi

In this paper, general in-plane trajectory tracking problem of a flexible beam is studied. To obtain the dynamic equations of motion of the beam, Hamiltonian dynamics is used and then Lagrange’s equations of beam dynamics and corresponding expressions for boundary conditions are derived. Resulting equations show that the coupled beam dynamics including beam vibration and its rigid in-plane motion take place in two different time domains. By using two-time scale (TTS) control theory, a control scheme is elaborated that makes the orientation and position of the mass center of the beam track a desired trajectory while suppressing its vibration. TTS composite controller has two parts: one is a tracking controller designed for the slow (rigid) subsystem, and the other one is a stabilizing controller for the fast (flexible) subsystem. For the fast subsystem, the proposed boundary control (BC) method does not require any information about vibration along the beam except at the end points, nor requires discretizing the partial differential equation of beam vibration to a set of ordinary differential equations. So, the method avoids the need for instruments to measure data from vibration of any point along the beam or designing an observer for estimating this information. Also, the proposed method prevents control spillover due to discretization. Simulation results show that fast BC is able to remove undesirable vibration of the flexible beam and the slow controller provides very good trajectory tracking with acceptable actuating forces/moments.


2009 ◽  
Vol 131 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Amir Lotfavar ◽  
Mohammad Eghtesad

In this paper, exponential stabilization of vibration of a flexible beam together with its general in-plane trajectory tracking is presented. Coupled beam dynamics including beam vibration (flexible/fast subsystem) and its rigid in-plane motion (rigid/slow subsystem) takes place in two different time domains. Therefore, to have the beam track a desired trajectory while suppressing its vibration by an exponential rate of decay, a composite control scheme is elaborated by two-time scale (TTS) control theory. This control law has two parts: one is a tracking controller designed for the rigid subsystem based on inverse dynamic law, and the other one is an exponential stabilizing controller for the flexible subsystem based on boundary control (BC) laws. Exponential stabilization is proved by using a metric containing kinetic and potential energies of the fast subsystem and by feedback of the rate of deflection and the slope at one end of the beam. Simulation results show that fast BC is able to remove undesirable vibration of the flexible beam and together with the slow inverse controller is able to provide very good trajectory tracking with acceptable actuating forces/moments. Also, they illustrate that tracking errors and the vibration amplitude are decreased versus time by the fast exponential stabilizing control law compared with an asymptotic stabilizing control law.


Author(s):  
A. Ashayeri ◽  
M. Eghtesad ◽  
M. Farid

Main purpose of the study presented in this paper is to demonstrate the boundary controllers design by singular perturbation approach for trajectory tracking of two-link flexible arm. Applying the two-time scale control theory on the nonlinear PDE model, a control scheme is elaborated which makes hubs’ angles track a desired trajectory while damping out the links vibration. In the proposed controller, fast (flexible) subsystem controller will damp out the vibration of the flexible links by a Lyapunov-type design and the other slow (rigid) subsystem Inverse Dynamic controller dominates the trajectory tracking. These two controllers constitute the composite control scheme. The method does not require any information about the vibration of the links along the links for the proposed fast control law as well as discretizing the PDE of arm vibration to set of ODEs. Therefore, the method excludes the effect of both observation and control spillover instability. The simulation results confirm that the proposed boundary controllers are quite effective in performance.


2020 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 8631-8637
Author(s):  
Aleksandra Mitrovic ◽  
Milos Milanovic ◽  
Kam K. Leang ◽  
Garrett M. Clayton
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 5922-5927
Author(s):  
Zhaoyang Duan ◽  
Costas Kravaris

2020 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 9918-9923
Author(s):  
Andres O. Pizarro-Lerma ◽  
Victor Santibanez ◽  
Ramon Garcia-Hernandez ◽  
Jorge Villalobos Chin

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