Sliding Mode Boundary Control of an Euler-Bernoulli Beam Subject to Disturbances

In this paper, a control technique is presented for an undamped, pinned-pinned Euler-Bernoulli beam with control inputs and bounded disturbances on one boundary. The control strategy drives the system to its origin at an arbitrary exponential rate in the presence of the disturbances. This is achieve...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIEEE transactions on automatic control Vol. 63; no. 10; pp. 3442 - 3448
Main Authors Karagiannis, Dimitri, Radisavljevic-Gajic, Verica
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York IEEE 01.10.2018
The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. (IEEE)
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Summary:In this paper, a control technique is presented for an undamped, pinned-pinned Euler-Bernoulli beam with control inputs and bounded disturbances on one boundary. The control strategy drives the system to its origin at an arbitrary exponential rate in the presence of the disturbances. This is achieved in two main steps. First, a backstepping transformation is used to convert the marginally stable Euler-Bernoulli beam system to a new form that has an exponentially stable homogeneous form. Control inputs are needed to fully convert the system to this form; however, since they are distorted by unknown bounded disturbances, the next step implements a sliding mode controller to account for them. The proposed sliding manifolds require a combination of classical and "second order" techniques in order to avoid discontinuous chattering on the physical system. Therefore, the continuous sliding mode controllers developed return the beam to its origin at an arbitrary exponential rate, and do so in the presence of unknown bounded disturbances on the boundary. The main contributions of this paper with respect to previous backstepping designs for the Euler-Bernoulli beam are that all three of the following goals are accomplished together: (i) steady-state position is the origin, (ii) decay rate has no theoretical restrictions, and (iii) is robust to bounded disturbances.
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ISSN:0018-9286
1558-2523
DOI:10.1109/TAC.2018.2793940