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Advances in adaptive control theory: Gradient- and derivative-free approaches

Posted on:2013-04-22Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:Georgia Institute of TechnologyCandidate:Yucelen, TanselFull Text:PDF
GTID:1458390008980182Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
In this dissertation, we present new approaches to improve standard designs in adaptive control theory, and novel adaptive control architectures.;We first present a novel Kalman filter based approach for approximately enforcing a linear constraint in standard adaptive control design. One application is that this leads to alternative forms for well known modification terms such as e--modification. In addition, it leads to smaller tracking errors without incurring significant oscillations in the system response and without requiring high modification gain. We derive alternative forms of e-- and adaptive loop recovery (ALR--) modifications.;Next, we show how to use Kalman filter optimization to derive a novel adaptation law. This results in an optimization-based time-varying adaptation gain that reduces the need for adaptation gain tuning.;A second major contribution of this dissertation is the development of a novel derivative-free, delayed weight update law for adaptive control. The assumption of constant unknown ideal weights is relaxed to the existence of time-varying weights, such that fast and possibly discontinuous variation in weights are allowed. This approach is particulary advantageous for applications to systems that can undergo a sudden change in dynamics, such as might be due to reconfiguration, deployment of a payload, docking, or structural damage, and for rejection of external disturbance processes.;As a third and final contribution, we develop a novel approach for extending all the methods developed in this dissertation to the case of output feedback. The approach is developed only for the case of derivative-free adaptive control, and the extension of the other approaches developed previously for the state feedback case to output feedback is left as a future research topic.;The proposed approaches of this dissertation are illustrated in both simulation and flight test.
Keywords/Search Tags:Adaptive control, Approach, Dissertation, Novel, Derivative-free
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