1. Introduction
Fractional calculus was born more than three centuries ago. It is a theory that extends integral calculus to arbitrary order [
1,
2]. In the two to three centuries following its birth, it was studied as a pure theoretical science with almost no practical application. However, in recent years, increased attention has been paid to the synchronization of fractional-order hyperchaotic systems because of their potential applications in many aspects of science and engineering, such as information processing, biological systems, and chemical science [
3,
4]. In addition, because fractional-order hyperchaotic systems exhibit uncertainty, unpredictability, and high sensitivity to initial conditions, they are extensively used in engineering fields such as secure communication and encryption. Different synchronization types and control schemes are available, such as projection synchronization [
5,
6], anti-synchronization [
7,
8], robust synchronization [
9,
10], generalized synchronization [
11,
12], the adaptive control scheme [
13,
14], and the sliding mode control scheme [
15]. The sliding mode control scheme includes the finite-time sliding mode and fixed-time sliding mode. In the finite-time sliding mode, the system state becomes stable within a period depending on the initial values of the system after reaching the sliding surface, whereas the system state becomes stable within a fixed period that depends only on the system parameters after reaching the sliding surface in the fixed-time sliding mode [
16,
17].
The sliding mode control scheme exhibits good robustness and can effectively suppress uncertain external interferences; however, it is only applicable to deterministic systems with known dynamics. To solve this problem, a general controller can be designed for uncertain systems by combining the fuzzy neural network (FNN) with the approximation characteristics. Type-1 and type-2 FNNs can effectively approximate nonlinear systems, and the synchronization of fractional-order hyperchaotic systems can be realized using fuzzy controllers [
18]. A generalized type-2 FNN has been proposed to approximate unknown nonlinear systems, solving the multi-switch synchronization problem encountered in fractional-order hyperchaotic systems [
19]. A fuzzy sliding mode control scheme has been proposed to improve the robustness of the unknown time-varying disturbance of fractional-order hyperchaotic systems [
20,
21,
22]. A type-2 fuzzy disturbance observer has been developed to describe variable-order hyperchaotic systems, and a robust controller has been designed to solve the synchronization problem encountered in fractional-order hyperchaotic systems [
23,
24]. The aforementioned FNN controller ignores two problems. The first problem is the curse of dimensionality, i.e., the number of rules of the FNN increases exponentially with the increase in input dimensions, which, in turn, greatly increases the system load. To solve this problem, many self-evolving fuzzy systems have been proposed [
25,
26,
27]. The second problem is random uncertainty. In the synchronization process, due to the interference of the environment, unknown and missing data dimensions, and randomness of the fractional-order hyperchaotic system, various fuzzy and random uncertainties are generated, which greatly affect the performance of the control system [
28,
29,
30].
Based on the above discussion, to solve the synchronization problem encountered in uncertain fractional-order hyperchaotic systems and avoid the curse of dimension and various uncertainty problems that may be encountered in the synchronization process, in this paper, we proposed a novel self-evolving non-singleton type-2 probabilistic FNN (SENSIT2PFNN) with fixed-time sliding mode control scheme based on the improved whale optimization algorithm (WOA) [
31]. The effectiveness of WOA has been verified in fields such as COVID-19 disease detection [
32], water demand prediction [
33], neural network hyperparameter optimization [
34], and multicell production planning [
35]. The main contributions of this study are as follows:
A novel SENSIT2PFNN was proposed to solve the problems of fuzzy uncertainty and random uncertainty encountered in fuzzy systems. The network structure was modified using the self-evolution algorithm, the rule base was optimized using the improved WOA, and the network adaptive law was used to optimize the network parameters.
By using the proposed SENSIT2PFNN to approximate the linear and uncertain nonlinear parts of uncertain fractional-order hyperchaotic systems, a universal fractional-order hyperchaotic synchronization controller was developed.
The developed fixed-time sliding mode controller eliminates the influence of approximation error and external interference and realizes the fixed-time synchronization of various uncertain fractional-order hyperchaotic systems.
By using the aforementioned control scheme, the synchronization of the uncertain fractional-order hyperchaotic system was realized. The rest of this article is organized as follows. In
Section 2, the problem formulation and preliminary are discussed. In
Section 3, the proposed SENSIT2PFNN structure is presented. In
Section 4, the proposed fixed-time sliding mode controller and its stability analysis are presented. The synchronization results of uncertain fractional-order hyperchaotic systems are discussed in
Section 5. Finally, the conclusion is presented in
Section 6.
2. Problem Formulation and Preliminary
Definition 1 ([36]). The Riemann–Liouville fractional differential with order of function can be expressed as follows:where , , and is the Gamma function. Property 1 ([37]). The following equations are established using the definitions by Riemann–Liouville and Caputo:where , RL represents the derivative defined by Riemann–Liouville, and C represents the derivative defined by Caputo. Consider the following system:where , and is a nonlinear function. The system defined using Equation (3) is stable at the origin. Definition 2 ([38]). When the system defined using Equation (3) is globally finite-time stable and the convergence time is bounded, the system’s origin is called a fixed-time stable equilibrium point.
Lemma 1 ([38]). Consider the following system:where ; , , , and are positive odd integers and satisfy the conditions and . The system’s equilibrium point is a fixed-time stable equilibrium point, and the upper bound of the convergence time can be expressed as follows: Lemma 2 ([39]). For any non-negative real number , ,…, , the following inequalities exist:
The following
-dimensional uncertain fractional-order hyperchaotic systems are considered:
where
and
are uncertain bounded functions;
is bounded external interference;
,
, and
are nonlinear bounded functions;
is the control signal;
and
are the state vectors of the response system and drive system, respectively;
is the fractional-order derivative; and
.
The synchronization error is defined as . The control objective is to design the controller such that .
The
i-th subsystem is defined as follows:
where
as shown in
Figure 1, and
is estimated using the proposed NST2PFNN.
Set
where
is the estimation error (
), and
is the best estimated value (
).
The control law is defined as follows:
where
;
is the fractional differential operator with order
,
, and
;
,
,
, and
are positive odd integers with
and
; and
is the bounded output of SENSIT2PFNN with
.
The
i-th error subsystem can be obtained by using Equations (9)–(11):
We aimed to design a fixed-time sliding mode control law () such that the error system given by Equation (12) can become stable within a fixed period independent of the initial value.
3. Self-Evolving Non-Singleton Type-2 Probabilistic Fuzzy Neural Network
3.1. Network Structure
To facilitate the self-evolution of the membership layer structure presented, type-2 asymmetric Gaussian functions are employed as the activation functions of all the neural network layers because they offer good flexibility. As shown in
Figure 2, the NSIT2PFNN model has six layers:
Input layer: The input of this layer is the output of the error system.
Fuzzification layer: In this layer, the single point input of the neural network is fuzzified into a type-2 membership function (MF), representing the uncertainty of the input. Let the type-2 MF generated by the
i-th input be
.
utilizes an asymmetric Gaussian MF with a mean value of
and a standard deviation width of
–
:
As shown in
Figure 3, to obtain the upper and lower membership degrees of the
i-th input of the network under the
j-th MF, the input of the network must be non-singleton blurred [
40]:
where
;
, and
are, respectively, the mean and standard deviations of the
j-th type-2 MF
of the
i-th input; and
is the fuzzy value of the
i-th input under the
j-th MF.
Membership layer: The membership degree of the
i-th input under the
j-th MF is calculated in this layer:
where
is the
j-th MF of the
i-th input;
and
are, respectively, the upper and lower membership degrees of the
i-th input under the
j-th MF; and
and
are, respectively the left and right width of the MF.
Probabilistic layer: In this layer, the Gaussian function is usually employed as the probability function (PF). To improve calculation efficiency, as shown in
Figure 4, the triangle function was used in this study:
where
is the
k-th PF of the
j-th MF,
and
are the output of the
k-th node of the
j-th input variable,
is the center of the triangle, and
is the center width of the triangle.
Rule layer: Each node in this layer represents a fuzzy rule, which calculates the upper and lower firing degrees based on product reasoning. Each rule is defined as follows:
where
is the
pj-th type-2 MF of the
i-th input, and
is the consequent parameter of the
l-th rule. Let the total number of rules be
M, and the upper and lower firing degrees of the
l-th rule are
where
and
are, respectively, the upper and lower firing degrees of the
l-th rule, and
K is the number of MFs per network input.
Output layer: The output of deblurring can be expressed as follows:
To facilitate the subsequent derivation process,
can be written as follows:
where
is the weight vector of the
i-th neural network,
is the optimal estimate of the weight, and
is the weight estimate.
3.2. Self-Evolution Algorithm
- (1)
Optimizing the rule base of neural networks with the improved WOA.
Due to the curse of dimensionality, an FNN with
inputs and
membership functions for each input generates up to
rules, which greatly increases unnecessary calculations. WOA offers the advantages of simple mechanisms, few parameters, and strong optimization ability. To make WOA suitable for the optimization of the NSIT2PFNN rule base, it was modified appropriately in this study; the steps are shown in
Figure 5.
First, the total number of rules
M of the network was obtained, and the individual position vector of the population with dimension
M was randomly generated. Next, the population size was set as 30 and binarized (set as 0 if it was less than 0.5 and as 1 for the rest). Each position was multiplied with the neural network rules to calculate the optimal fitness value for the current optimal individual position. The basic parameters, such as
and
, were initialized such that when
and
, the individual population updates its position by following the “round up the prey” strategy; when
and
, the individual population updates its position by following the “bubble net predation” strategy; and when
, the individual population updates its position by following the “search for prey” strategy. After a round of position updates was completed, all position information was brought into the neural network rule base, the fitness value was calculated, the optimal individual position was retained, and the cycle was terminated upon reaching the maximum number of iterations. In this paper, the maximum number of iterations was set as 50, and the following fitness function was used:
Remark 1. In this paper, only two numbers were used in the individual coordinate values of the population to be optimized: 0 and 1. In such cases, the traditional WOA is no longer applicable, and all population individuals and the search space must be binarized after each iteration to generate a new population. The binarization algorithm can be expressed as follows:where is the i-th coordinate value of an individual in the population. - (2)
Self-evolution of the membership layer of NSIT2PFNN
The structure of the membership layer of NSIT2PFNN was optimized by considering the following three type-2 MFs of the
i-th input:
,
, and
, where
is the left width of the standard deviation of the MF,
is the mean point of the MF,
is the right width of the standard deviation of the MF, and the standard deviation width of each input of lower MF is half of that of the upper MF. As shown in
Figure 6, for each input
, if the maximum upper membership degree is lower than the set value min_Degree (0.2), a new type-2 MF is generated. Its mean point is
, and the width of the left (right) standard deviation is the distance from its mean point to the mean point of the adjacent MF:
The right (left) standard deviation width of its adjacent MF was changed in the same manner.
If the number of MFs exceeds the set value max_Mf (value 3), the farthest MF is deleted, as shown in
Figure 7.
4. Controller Design and Stability Analysis
We designed a fixed-time sliding mode controller
to stabilize the error subsystem given by Equation (12). The sliding surface can be selected as follows:
where
is the sliding surface of the
i-th subsystem;
;
;
,
,
, and
are positive odd integers such that
and
; and
.
When the state variable of the error system reaches the sliding surface, it satisfies the following condition:
Theorem 1. The state variable of the error subsystem given by Equation (12) converges to zero within a fixed time after reaching the sliding surface:
Proof. According to the Lyapunov function:
According to Property 1, the derivative of the Lyapunov function with respect to time
t can be obtained as follows:
According to Lemma 1, the state variable of the error subsystem converges to zero within a fixed time after reaching the sliding surface. Thus, Theorem 1 is proved.
The sliding mode control law
can be designed as follows:
Theorem 2. The error subsystem given by Equation (12) converges to the sliding mode surface under the control law (Equation (31)).
Proof. According to the Lyapunov function:
According to Equation (20), the derivative of the Lyapunov function with respect to time
is obtained as follows:
Substituting Equations (12), (20), and (24) into Equation (33), we obtain:
Setting
, we obtain:
Setting
, we obtain:
Thus, according to the Lyapunov stability theorem, Theorem 2 is proved. □
Theorem 3. The error subsystem given by Equation (12) converges to the sliding mode surface within a fixed time under the action of the control law (Equation (31)):
Proof. According to the Lyapunov function:
Substituting Equations (12) and (24) into Equation (38) and differentiating it, we obtain:
Setting
, we obtain:
According to Lemma 1, the error subsystem converges to the sliding mode surface within a fixed time under the action of control law (Equation (31)). Thus, Theorem 3 is proved. □
5. Simulation
We verified the effectiveness of the proposed fractional-order hyperchaotic system synchronization scheme by performing simulation experiments.
As performed in a previous study [
41], we used the fractional-order hyperchaotic Chen system as the drive system and the fractional-order hyperchaotic Lorenz system as the response system. The respective formulas are as follows:
where the nonlinear unknown function
and external interference
are selected as follows:
The proposed method was used for synchronization control. The parameters of NSIT2PFNN are presented in
Table 1. The initial values were set as follows:
, and =, with the fractional order . The control parameters were set as , , , , , , and .
The synchronization results are shown in
Figure 8 and
Figure 9, and the root mean square error (RMSE) values are presented in
Table 2 for comparison. The proposed method was employed for the synchronization of fractional-order hyperchaotic financial systems with different initial values [
42], novel fractional-order hyperchaotic systems, and fractional-order hyperchaotic Chen systems [
43]. The control and network parameters were the same for all. The RMSE values are presented in
Table 2 for comparison.
As shown in
Figure 8 and
Figure 9 and
Table 2, the proposed method achieved full synchronization of the uncertain fractional-order hyperchaotic system and yielded lower RMSE, higher control accuracy, and better control effect than the three synchronization schemes.
6. Conclusions
In this study, to address the synchronization problem encountered in uncertain fractional-order hyperchaotic systems, a novel self-evolving NSIT2PFNN model was proposed to estimate nonlinear functions in system dynamics. In the proposed model, the structure of the neural network is not fixed, and the structure of the membership layer and the number of fuzzy rules can be adjusted adaptively.
In addition, a fixed-time sliding mode controller based on the FNN was designed to eliminate the approximation error and external interference, and three synchronization simulation experiments using different fractional-order hyperchaotic systems were performed.
The simulation results demonstrated that the proposed controller could achieve a good control effect when there are various uncertainties in the dynamic process of the system. In future studies, we will extend the proposed method to other uncertain nonlinear systems.
Author Contributions
Conceptualization, A.F.; methodology, A.F.; software, A.F.; validation, K.-Y.S. and A.F.; formal analysis, A.F.; investigation, A.F.; resources, A.F. and K.-Y.S.; data curation, A.F.; writing—original draft preparation, A.F.; writing—review and editing, A.F.; visualization, A.F.; supervision, K.-Y.S.; project administration, A.F. and K.-Y.S.; funding acquisition, T.-T.W. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
Funding
This work is supported in part by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant 52074088) and in part by the Northeast Petroleum University Provincial Outstanding Youth Reserve Talent Project (grant SJQH202002).
Data Availability Statement
The data that support the findings of this study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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