scholarly journals Comparison of Disturbance Compensators for a Discrete-Time System with Parameter Uncertainty

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (18) ◽  
pp. 6219
Author(s):  
Zhongyi Guo ◽  
Haifeng Ma ◽  
Qinghua Song

The control design for many industrial applications requires compensation for parameter uncertainty and external disturbance. Reported in many previous works, the parameter uncertainty and external disturbance are combined as a lumped disturbance, which is assumed to be smooth and bounded. However, for a discrete-time sliding mode control (DSMC) system, the above assumption may not hold. Here, the parameter uncertainty, along with its compensation in the DSMC system, are reconsidered and reevaluated. The influence of parameter uncertainty on the closed-loop system stability is first addressed. Then, the comparative investigation of the performance of six state-of-the-art disturbance compensators for parameter uncertainty compensation is conducted. Simulation results show that none of these compensators can effectively observe and compensate for the parameter uncertainty.

2021 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ark Dev ◽  
David Fernando Novella Rodríguez ◽  
Sumant Anand ◽  
Mrinal Kanti Sarkar

Abstract The letter proposes frequency stability in power systems with input delay. A closed loop system can be oscillatory or even unstable without the exact knowledge of delay. Therefore, it is desirable to design a control scheme which is based on the estimation of unknown delay. The proposed design consists of an infinite dimensional observer with an adaptive time delay estimation and a sliding mode controller (SMC). The merit of the proposed concept lies in the fact that the unknown delay is valued by just estimating the smallest delay segment. The controller input is obtained from a set of sequential observers that predicts the system states and ensures asymptotic stability of the closed loop system with input delay estimation. The existence of sliding mode and the closed loop system stability is proved thanks to the Lyapunov and Lyapunov–Krasovskii candidate functionals, respectively. Simulation results confirm the effectiveness of the proposed design.


Author(s):  
Mustefa Jibril ◽  
Messay Tadese ◽  
Reta Degefa

In this paper, a two-link manipulator system stability performance is designed and analyzed using Optimal control technique. The manipulator system is highly nonlinear and unstable. The system is modelled using Lagrangian equation and linearized in upward unstable position. The closed loop system is designed using optimal sliding mode controller. The system is compared with a known PID controller with an impulse applied and disturbance torques and a promising results has been obtained.


Author(s):  
João Manoel Gomes da Silva Jr. ◽  
Romeu Reginatto ◽  
Sophie Tarbouriech

The purpose of this paper is to study the determination of stability regions for discrete-time linear systems with saturating controls through anti-windup schemes. Considering that a linear dynamic output feedback has been designed to stabilize the linear discrete-time system (without saturation), a method is proposed for designing an anti-windup gain that maximizes an estimate of the basin of attraction of the closed-loop system in the presence of saturation. It is shown that the closed-loop system obtained from the controller plus the anti-windup gain can be modeled by a linear system connected to a deadzone nonlinearity. From this model, stability conditions based on quadratic Lyapunov functions are stated. Algorithms based on LMI schemes are proposed for computing both the anti-windup gain and an associated stability region.


Author(s):  
Mustefa Jibril ◽  
Messay Tadese ◽  
Reta Degefa

In this paper, a two-link manipulator system stability performance is designed and analyzed using Optimal control technique. The manipulator system is highly nonlinear and unstable. The system is modelled using Lagrangian equation and linearized in upward unstable position. The closed loop system is designed using optimal sliding mode controller. The system is compared with a known PID controller with an impulse applied and disturbance torques and a promising results has been obtained.


1989 ◽  
Vol 111 (3) ◽  
pp. 444-451 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. K. Mills ◽  
A. A. Goldenberg

Sufficient conditions are proved for a robotic manipulator controller so that asymptotic tracking/regulation occurs, independent of dynamic parameter uncertainty, for a certain class of input signals. The uncertainty can be quite large, and arise chiefly from the manipulation of payloads with unknown mass/inertia properties. The control is obtained using a robust controller which consists of two separate parts: 1) a compensator which makes the closed-loop robotic system insensitive to parameter uncertainty and generates asymptotic regulation of a certain class of input signals and 2) a stabilizing compensator, whose purpose is to stabilize the closed-loop system. Stability of the closed-loop system is guaranteed by choosing large feedback gains. In addition to the above, it is also shown that the proposed feedback controller provides an arbitrarily small tracking error capability for the particular class of input trajectories.


Complexity ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 2017 ◽  
pp. 1-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bin Xu ◽  
Pengchao Zhang

This paper studies the control of a flexible-link manipulator with uncertainty. The fast and slow dynamics are derived based on the singular perturbation (SP) theory. The sliding mode control is proposed while the adaptive design is developed using neural networks (NNs) and disturbance observer (DOB) where the novel update laws for NN and DOB are designed. The closed-loop system stability is guaranteed via Lyapunov analysis. The effectiveness of the proposed method is verified via simulation test.


2013 ◽  
Vol 341-342 ◽  
pp. 945-948 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Zhou ◽  
Bao Bin Liu

In view of parameter uncertainty in the magnetic levitation system, the adaptive controller design problem is investigated for the system. Nonlinear adaptive controller based on backstepping is proposed for the design of the actual system with parameter uncertainty. The controller can estimate the uncertainty parameter online so as to improve control accuracy. Theoretical analysis shows that the closed-loop system is stable regardless of parameter uncertainty. Simulation results demonstrate the effectiveness of the presented method.


Author(s):  
Shubo Yang ◽  
Xi Wang

Limit protection, which frequently exists as an auxiliary part in control systems, is not the primary motive of control but is a necessary guarantee of safety. As in the case of aircraft engine control, the main objective is to provide the desired thrust based on the position of the throttle; nevertheless, limit protection is indispensable to keep the engine operating within limits. There are plenty of candidates that can be applied to design the regulators for limit protection. PID control with gain-scheduling technique has been used for decades in the aerospace industry. This classic approach suggests linearizing the original nonlinear model at different power-level points, developing PID controllers correspondingly, and then scheduling the linear time-invariant (LTI) controllers according to system states. Sliding mode control (SMC) is well-known with mature theories and numerous successful applications. With the one-sided convergence property, SMC is especially suitable for limit protection tasks. In the case of aircraft engine control, SMC regulators have been developed to supplant traditional linear regulators, where SMC can strictly keep relevant outputs within their limits and improve the control performance. In aircraft engine control field, we all know that the plant is a nonlinear system. However, the present design of the sliding controller is carried out with linear models, which severely restricts the valid scope of the controller. Even if the gain scheduling technique is adopted, the stability of the whole systems cannot be theoretically proved. Research of linear parameter varying (LPV) system throws light on a class of nonlinear control problems. In present works, we propose a controller design method based on the LPV model to solve the engines control problem and achieve considerable effectiveness. In this paper, we discuss the design of a sliding controller for limit protection task of aircraft engines, the plant of which is described as an LPV system instead of LTI models. We define the sliding surface as tracking errors and, with the aid of vertex property, present the stability analysis of the closed-loop system on the sliding surface. An SMC law is designed to guarantee that the closed-loop system is globally attracted to the sliding surface. Hot day (ISA+30° C) takeoff simulations based on a reliable turbofan model are presented, which test the proposed method for temperature protection and verify its stability and effectiveness.


2016 ◽  
Vol 39 (7) ◽  
pp. 1007-1016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yu Wang ◽  
Bingxiu Bian

The electric sail (ES) is a novel propellantless propulsion concept, which extracts the solar wind momentum by repelling the positively charged ions. Due to the difficulty of attitude adjustment by the large flexible structure and the uncertainty of ion density, velocity and electron temperature by solar wind, there exist thrust input uncertainty and saturation with time-varying bounds for ES. The trajectory tracking problem for ES in three-dimensional (3-D) space is studied, and the composite sliding mode control scheme with corresponding guidance strategy is proposed for the single-input–multiple-output (SIMO) non-linear system. The hierarchical sliding surfaces are constructed with an auxiliary design system to analyse the effect of input saturation constraints and decouple the SIMO non-linear system to reduce the control complexity. Also, the disturbance estimation based on a super-twisting algorithm is employed to decrease the switch chattering and improve the system robustness. It is proved that all the sliding mode surfaces are asymptotically stable, and all the signals of the closed-loop system are bounded with input saturation constraints. Furthermore, all the signals are converging to zero and the closed-loop system is asymptotically stable without saturation. Finally, the simulation demonstrates the proposed composite sliding mode control is fit for ES 3-D trajectory tracking.


2012 ◽  
Vol 190-191 ◽  
pp. 1175-1178
Author(s):  
Le Zhang ◽  
Hong Yang ◽  
Xiao Dong Liu

It is presented a model of uncertain time-delay switched fuzzy systems, which each subsystem of switched system is an uncertain time-delay fuzzy system. The robust reliable control problem is studied by multi-Lyapunov functions. When the actuators are serious failure – the residual part of actuators can not make original system stability, using switching technique depend on the states of observers, robust fuzzy reliable controller is built to ensure the relevant closed-loop system is asymptotic stability. The results for example are used to illustrate the feasibility and the effectiveness of the method.


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