dc.description.abstract |
Underactuated nonlinear systems are always equipped with less number of actua
tors than the degree of freedom. This feature offers certain benefits like reduction
in weight and minimum energy usage. Majority of the robotic systems (including
aerial, underwater and ground robotics) are found to be underactuated in na
ture. Therefore, research in such system is still quite demanding and challenging.
It is also worthy to mention that the underactuation phenomenon, do not allow
the direct design of control input as practiced in fully actuated systems. The
two decades have witnessed many control methodologies which include feedback
linearization, energy-based, back-stepping, fuzzy logics and sliding mode control.
However, majority of these techniques lags behind in the robust stabilization of
this class except sliding mode oriented techniques. An extensive simulation study
of the underactuated system is carried out in the existing literature while consid
ering the examples of translational oscillator with a rotational actuator (TORA),
flexible robots, pendulums and surface vessels.
In this thesis a simulation as well as experimental study is carried out for a class
of underactuated systems. The nonlinear model, of the underactuated systems,
is treated generally. The dynamics are either transformed into an input output
form and then an integral manifold is devised for the control design purpose or an
integral manifold is defined directly for the concerned class. Having defined the
integral manifolds discontinuous control laws are designed which are capable to
maintain sliding mode from the very beginning. The closed loop stability of these
systems is presented in an impressive way. The effectiveness and demand of the
designed control laws are proved in term of simulation and experimental results
of a ball and beam system. In addition, a comparative experimental study is
also performed between three generations of sliding mode control, which includes
the conventional first order sliding mode control (FOSMC), second order sliding
mode (SOSMC), fast terminal sliding mode (FTSMC), and integral sliding mode
(ISMC). The comparative study takes into account certain features like tracking
performance, i.e., settling time, overshoots, robustness enhancement, chattering
reduction, sliding mode convergences and control efforts. |
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