Self-tuning state-feedback control of a rotary pendulum system using adjustable degree-of-stability design

This paper formulates an original hierarchical self-tuning control procedure to enhance the disturbance-rejection capability of under-actuated rotary pendulum systems against exogenous disturbances. The conventional state-feedback controllers generally make a trade-off between the robustness and con...

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Main Authors: Omer Saleem, Mohsin Rizwan, Khalid Mahmood-ul-Hasan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2021-01-01
Series:Automatika
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00051144.2020.1864186
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spelling doaj-9872d2d3eff342ff8891586b935c99a02021-06-21T12:25:12ZengTaylor & Francis GroupAutomatika0005-11441848-33802021-01-01621849710.1080/00051144.2020.18641861864186Self-tuning state-feedback control of a rotary pendulum system using adjustable degree-of-stability designOmer Saleem0Mohsin Rizwan1Khalid Mahmood-ul-Hasan2National University of Computer and Emerging SciencesUniversity of Engineering and TechnologyUniversity of Engineering and TechnologyThis paper formulates an original hierarchical self-tuning control procedure to enhance the disturbance-rejection capability of under-actuated rotary pendulum systems against exogenous disturbances. The conventional state-feedback controllers generally make a trade-off between the robustness and control effort in a closed-loop system. To combine the aforementioned characteristics into a single framework, this paper contributes to develop and augment the baseline Linear-Quadratic-Regulator (LQR) with a novel “adjustable degree-of-stability design” module. This augmentation dynamically relocates the system's closed-loop poles in the stable (left-half) region of the complex plane by dynamically adjusting a single hyper-parameter that modifies the constituents of LQR's performance index. The hyper-parameter is adaptively modulated online via a pre-calibrated hyperbolic-secant-function that is driven by state-error variables. The performance of the proposed adaptive controller is benchmarked against fixed-gain controllers via credible hardware experiments conducted on the standard QNET Rotary Pendulum setup. The experimental outcomes indicate that the proposed controller significantly enhances the system's robustness against exogenous disturbances and maintains its stability within a broad range of operating conditions, without inducing peak servo requirements.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00051144.2020.1864186linear quadratic regulatoradaptive controldegree-of-stabilityself-tuningnonlinear scaling functionrotary inverted pendulum
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Omer Saleem
Mohsin Rizwan
Khalid Mahmood-ul-Hasan
spellingShingle Omer Saleem
Mohsin Rizwan
Khalid Mahmood-ul-Hasan
Self-tuning state-feedback control of a rotary pendulum system using adjustable degree-of-stability design
Automatika
linear quadratic regulator
adaptive control
degree-of-stability
self-tuning
nonlinear scaling function
rotary inverted pendulum
author_facet Omer Saleem
Mohsin Rizwan
Khalid Mahmood-ul-Hasan
author_sort Omer Saleem
title Self-tuning state-feedback control of a rotary pendulum system using adjustable degree-of-stability design
title_short Self-tuning state-feedback control of a rotary pendulum system using adjustable degree-of-stability design
title_full Self-tuning state-feedback control of a rotary pendulum system using adjustable degree-of-stability design
title_fullStr Self-tuning state-feedback control of a rotary pendulum system using adjustable degree-of-stability design
title_full_unstemmed Self-tuning state-feedback control of a rotary pendulum system using adjustable degree-of-stability design
title_sort self-tuning state-feedback control of a rotary pendulum system using adjustable degree-of-stability design
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Automatika
issn 0005-1144
1848-3380
publishDate 2021-01-01
description This paper formulates an original hierarchical self-tuning control procedure to enhance the disturbance-rejection capability of under-actuated rotary pendulum systems against exogenous disturbances. The conventional state-feedback controllers generally make a trade-off between the robustness and control effort in a closed-loop system. To combine the aforementioned characteristics into a single framework, this paper contributes to develop and augment the baseline Linear-Quadratic-Regulator (LQR) with a novel “adjustable degree-of-stability design” module. This augmentation dynamically relocates the system's closed-loop poles in the stable (left-half) region of the complex plane by dynamically adjusting a single hyper-parameter that modifies the constituents of LQR's performance index. The hyper-parameter is adaptively modulated online via a pre-calibrated hyperbolic-secant-function that is driven by state-error variables. The performance of the proposed adaptive controller is benchmarked against fixed-gain controllers via credible hardware experiments conducted on the standard QNET Rotary Pendulum setup. The experimental outcomes indicate that the proposed controller significantly enhances the system's robustness against exogenous disturbances and maintains its stability within a broad range of operating conditions, without inducing peak servo requirements.
topic linear quadratic regulator
adaptive control
degree-of-stability
self-tuning
nonlinear scaling function
rotary inverted pendulum
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00051144.2020.1864186
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AT mohsinrizwan selftuningstatefeedbackcontrolofarotarypendulumsystemusingadjustabledegreeofstabilitydesign
AT khalidmahmoodulhasan selftuningstatefeedbackcontrolofarotarypendulumsystemusingadjustabledegreeofstabilitydesign
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