An Adaptive Robust Controller for Hydraulic Robotic Manipulators with a Flow-Mapping Compensator

Author(s):  
Fu Zhang ◽  
Junhui Zhang ◽  
Bing Xu ◽  
Huaizhi Zong

Proportional directional control valves have flexible control functions for the control of various hydraulic manipulators. It is foreseeable that the application of proportional directional control valves will be further expanded. However, due to its own structure, its important parameter, flow gain, is complex, and it has a complex functional relationship with valve opening and temperature. The variable flow gain reduces the performance of a strictly derived nonlinear controller. Therefore, it is necessary to consider the nonlinearity of flow gain in the controller design. In order to solve the above problems, this paper proposes an adaptive robust controller for a hydraulic manipulator with a flow-mapping compensator, which takes into account the nonlinear flow gain and improves the performance of the nonlinear controller. First, we established an adaptive robust controller of the hydraulic manipulator to obtain the load flow of the control input valve. Then, the function of flow gain, input voltage, and temperature are calibrated offline using cubic polynomial, and the flow-mapping compensator is obtained. Finally, we calculate the input voltage based on the flow-mapping compensator and load flow. The flow-mapping compensator further reduces the uncertainty of the model and improves the robustness of the system. By using the proposed controller, the control accuracy of the hydraulic manipulator is significantly improved.

Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (18) ◽  
pp. 5760
Author(s):  
Eduardo Campos-Mercado ◽  
Edwin Fernando Mendoza-Santos ◽  
Jorge Antonio Torres-Muñoz ◽  
Edwin Román-Hernández ◽  
Víctor Iván Moreno-Oliva ◽  
...  

In this paper, we present a nonlinear PID controller based on saturation functions with variable parameters in order to regulate the output voltage of a buck converter in the presence of changes in the input voltage. The main feature of the proposed controller is to bound the control input with a variable parameter to avoid the windup effect generated by the combination of the integral control action and some operation conditions. The main advantages of the proposed nonlinear PID controller are its low computing cost and the simple tuning task to implement the control strategy in an embedded system. The acceptable behavior of the closed-loop system is presented through the simulation and experimental results.


Author(s):  
Victor Pomper

The 47 800-ton vessel Altair of the Compagnie Navale des Pétroles (C.N.P.) was the first oil-tanker to be equipped with a hydraulic remote-control system of cargo valves. The vessel was delivered at the beginning of May 1959. The opening and closing operations of the valves were controlled from a central panel which was fitted with manually operated directional control valves. The panel was located in the cargo valves' remote-control room which also housed the indispensable remote-controlled level-indicator board. Since then the application of hydraulic remote-controlled valves has become widespread and has taken one of two forms : that of a centralized control system or that of directional control valves located on the deck. Remote-controlled valves are either gate valves operated by a hydraulic cylinder, or butterfly valves operated by a hydraulic rotary actuator. The application of remote-control also allowed the setting up of the ‘free-flow’ system which uses hydraulically operated bulkhead valves. The first ‘free-flow’ oil-tanker was the Sirius of the C.N.P.; it was delivered in 1961. At present it appears that there exists an ever-increasing trend towards automation in the loading and unloading of tanker cargoes. This is accomplished by electrically operated directional control valves, which are connected with electrically programmed systems or with electronic servo-controls.


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