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Keywords = non-singular terminal sliding mode control

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18 pages, 947 KB  
Article
Fixed-Time Attitude Control for a Flexible Space-Tethered Satellite via a Nonsingular Terminal Sliding-Mode Controller
by Cong Xue, Qiao Shi, Hecun Zheng, Baizheng Huan, Weiran Yao, Yankun Wang and Xiangyu Shao
Aerospace 2025, 12(10), 907; https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace12100907 - 9 Oct 2025
Viewed by 99
Abstract
This paper presents a rigid–flexible coupling dynamic modeling framework and a fixed-time control strategy for a flexible space-tethered satellite (STS) system. A high-fidelity rigid–flexible coupling dynamic model of STS is developed using the finite element method, accurately capturing the coupled attitude dynamics of [...] Read more.
This paper presents a rigid–flexible coupling dynamic modeling framework and a fixed-time control strategy for a flexible space-tethered satellite (STS) system. A high-fidelity rigid–flexible coupling dynamic model of STS is developed using the finite element method, accurately capturing the coupled attitude dynamics of the satellite platform and flexible tether. Leveraging a simplified representation of the STS model, a nonsingular terminal sliding-mode controller (NTSMC) is synthesized via fixed-time stability theory. Uncertainties and disturbances within the system are compensated for by a radial basis function neural network (RBFNN), ensuring strong robustness. The controller’s fixed-time convergence property—with convergence time independent of initial conditions—is established using Lyapunov stability theory, enabling reliable operation in complex space environments. Numerical simulations implemented on the STS rigid–flexible coupling model validate the controller’s efficacy. Comparative analyses demonstrate superior tracking performance and enhanced practicality over conventional sliding-mode controllers, especially in the aspect of chattering suppression for the satellite thrusters. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Application of Tether Technology in Space)
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21 pages, 4287 KB  
Article
Performance Enhancement and Control Strategy for Dual-Stator Bearingless Switched Reluctance Motors in Magnetically Levitated Artificial Hearts
by Chuanyu Sun, Tao Liu, Chunmei Wang, Qilong Gao, Xingling Xiao and Ning Han
Electronics 2025, 14(19), 3782; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14193782 - 24 Sep 2025
Viewed by 188
Abstract
Magnetically levitated artificial hearts impose stringent requirements on the blood-pump motor: zero friction, minimal heat generation and full biocompatibility. Traditional mechanical-bearing motors and permanent-magnet bearingless motors fail to satisfy all of these demands simultaneously. A bearingless switched reluctance motor (BSRM), whose rotor contains [...] Read more.
Magnetically levitated artificial hearts impose stringent requirements on the blood-pump motor: zero friction, minimal heat generation and full biocompatibility. Traditional mechanical-bearing motors and permanent-magnet bearingless motors fail to satisfy all of these demands simultaneously. A bearingless switched reluctance motor (BSRM), whose rotor contains no permanent magnets, offers a simple structure, high thermal tolerance, and inherent fault-tolerance, making it an ideal drive for implantable circulatory support. This paper proposes an 18/15/6-pole dual-stator BSRM (DSBSRM) that spatially separates the torque and levitation flux paths, enabling independent, high-precision control of both functions. To suppress torque ripple induced by pulsatile blood flow, a variable-overlap TSF-PWM-DITC strategy is developed that optimizes commutation angles online. In addition, a grey-wolf-optimized fast non-singular terminal sliding-mode controller (NRLTSMC) is introduced to shorten rotor displacement–error convergence time and to enhance suspension robustness against hydraulic disturbances. Co-simulation results under typical artificial heart operating conditions show noticeable reductions in torque ripple and speed fluctuation, as well as smaller rotor radial positioning error, validating the proposed motor and control scheme as a high-performance, biocompatible, and reliable drive solution for next-generation magnetically levitated artificial hearts. Full article
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30 pages, 4858 KB  
Article
A Hierarchical Slip-Compensated Control Strategy for Trajectory Tracking of Wheeled ROVs on Complex Deep-Sea Terrains
by Dewei Li, Zizhong Zheng, Yuqi Wang, Zhongjun Ding, Yifan Yang and Lei Yang
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2025, 13(9), 1826; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13091826 - 20 Sep 2025
Viewed by 310
Abstract
With the rapid development of deep-sea resource exploration and marine scientific research, wheeled remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) have become crucial for seabed operations. However, under complex seabed conditions, traditional ROV control systems suffer from insufficient trajectory tracking accuracy, poor disturbance rejection capability, and [...] Read more.
With the rapid development of deep-sea resource exploration and marine scientific research, wheeled remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) have become crucial for seabed operations. However, under complex seabed conditions, traditional ROV control systems suffer from insufficient trajectory tracking accuracy, poor disturbance rejection capability, and low dynamic torque distribution efficiency. These issues lead to poor motion stability and high energy consumption on sloped terrains and soft substrates, which limits the effectiveness of deep-sea engineering. To address this, we proposed a comprehensive motion control solution for deep-sea wheeled ROVs. To improve modeling accuracy, a coupled kinematic and dynamic model was developed, together with a body-to-terrain coordinate frame transformation. Based on rigid-body kinematics, three-degree-of-freedom kinematic equations incorporating the slip ratio and sideslip angle were derived. By integrating hydrodynamic effects, seabed reaction forces, the Janosi soil model, and the impact of subsidence depth, a dynamic model that reflects nonlinear wheel–seabed interactions was established. For optimizing disturbance rejection and trajectory tracking, a hierarchical control method was designed. At the kinematic level, an improved model predictive control framework with terminal constraints and quadratic programming was adopted. At the dynamic level, non-singular fast terminal sliding mode control combined with a fixed-time nonlinear observer enabled rapid disturbance estimation. Additionally, a dynamic torque distribution algorithm enhanced traction performance and trajectory tracking accuracy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Engineering)
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18 pages, 2277 KB  
Article
The Integrated Disturbance Estimation and Non-Singular Terminal Sliding Mode Longitudinal Motion Controller for Low-Speed Autonomous Electric Vehicles
by Boyuan Li, Wenfei Li, Wei Hua, Lei Guo, Haitao Xing, Hangbin Tang and Chao Huang
Sensors 2025, 25(18), 5799; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25185799 - 17 Sep 2025
Viewed by 329
Abstract
In the current literature, few motion control studies have considered the disturbances caused by road profile, model uncertainty, and actuator delay in regard to low-speed autonomous vehicles. In addition, motion controller designs usually rely on motor/brake torque control, which is not always available. [...] Read more.
In the current literature, few motion control studies have considered the disturbances caused by road profile, model uncertainty, and actuator delay in regard to low-speed autonomous vehicles. In addition, motion controller designs usually rely on motor/brake torque control, which is not always available. This study outlines an integrated disturbance estimation and non-singular terminal sliding mode controller (NS-TSMC) to overcome disturbances in low-speed scenarios through traction/brake pedal position control. First, a longitudinal dynamic model that considers a detailed brake-by-wire hydraulic braking system model and a motor actuator model is proposed. Road disturbances, model uncertainty, and actuator delays are also considered in vehicle modelling. This vehicle model was verified through experimental data from a low-speed autonomous sightseeing vehicle. Then, based on the proposed vehicle model, the disturbance and uncertain parameter estimator was designed and integrated with NS-TSMC to achieve longitudinal motion control through throttle/brake pedal control. Experimental results from the experimental sightseeing vehicle and simulation results demonstrated the improvement of the longitudinal motion tracking performance and motion comfort compared with a benchmark proportional–integral–derivative (PID) longitudinal motion controller. Full article
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22 pages, 5146 KB  
Article
Improving Control Performance of Tilt-Rotor VTOL UAV with Model-Based Reward and Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning
by Muammer Ugur and Aydin Yesildirek
Aerospace 2025, 12(9), 814; https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace12090814 - 9 Sep 2025
Viewed by 674
Abstract
Tilt-rotor Vertical Takeoff and Landing Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (TR-VTOL UAVs) combine fixed-wing and rotary-wing configurations, offering optimized flight planning but presenting challenges due to their complex dynamics and uncertainties. This study investigates a multi-agent reinforcement learning (RL) control system utilizing Soft Actor-Critic (SAC) [...] Read more.
Tilt-rotor Vertical Takeoff and Landing Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (TR-VTOL UAVs) combine fixed-wing and rotary-wing configurations, offering optimized flight planning but presenting challenges due to their complex dynamics and uncertainties. This study investigates a multi-agent reinforcement learning (RL) control system utilizing Soft Actor-Critic (SAC) modules, which are designed to independently control each input with a tailored reward mechanism. By implementing a novel reward structure based on a dynamic reference response region, the multi-agent design improves learning efficiency by minimizing data redundancy. Compared to other control methods such as Actor-Critic Neural Networks (AC NN), Proximal Policy Optimization (PPO), Nonsingular Terminal Sliding Mode Control (NTSMC), and PID controllers, the proposed system shows at least a 30% improvement in transient performance metrics—including RMSE, rise time, settling time, and maximum overshoot—under both no wind and constant 20 m/s wind conditions, representing an extreme scenario to evaluate controller robustness. This approach has also reduced training time by 80% compared to single-agent systems, lowering energy consumption and environmental impact. Full article
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20 pages, 6244 KB  
Article
Decentralized Compliance Control for Multi-Axle Heavy Vehicles Equipped with Electro-Hydraulic Actuator Suspension Systems
by Mengke Yang, Chunbo Xu and Min Yan
Sensors 2025, 25(17), 5456; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25175456 - 3 Sep 2025
Viewed by 468
Abstract
This article introduces a novel decentralized compliance control technique designed to manage the behavior of multi-axle heavy vehicles equipped with electro-hydraulic actuator suspension systems on uneven terrains. To address the challenges of controller design complexity and network communication burden in large-scale active suspension [...] Read more.
This article introduces a novel decentralized compliance control technique designed to manage the behavior of multi-axle heavy vehicles equipped with electro-hydraulic actuator suspension systems on uneven terrains. To address the challenges of controller design complexity and network communication burden in large-scale active suspension systems for multi-axle heavy vehicles, the decentralized scheme proposed in this paper decomposes the overall vehicle control problem into decentralized compliance control tasks for multiple electro-hydraulic actuator suspension subsystems (MEHASS), each responding to road disturbances. The position-based compliance control strategy consists of an outer-loop generalized impedance controller (GIC) and an inner-loop position controller. The GIC, which offers explicit force-tracking performance, is employed to define the dynamic interaction between each wheel and the uneven road surface, thereby generating the vertical trajectory for the MEHASS. This design effectively reduces vertical vibration transmission to the vehicle chassis, improving ride comfort. To handle external disturbances and enhance control accuracy, the position control employs a nonsingular fast integral terminal sliding mode controller. Furthermore, a three-axle heavy vehicle prototype with electro-hydraulic actuator suspension is developed for on-road driving experiments. The effectiveness of the proposed control method in enhancing ride comfort is demonstrated through comparative experiments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Vehicle Dynamics and Control, 2nd Edition)
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18 pages, 3794 KB  
Article
Augmented Recursive Sliding Mode Observer Based Adaptive Terminal Sliding Mode Controller for PMSM Drives
by Qiankang Hou, Bin Ma, Yan Sun, Bing Shi and Chen Ding
Actuators 2025, 14(9), 433; https://doi.org/10.3390/act14090433 - 2 Sep 2025
Viewed by 316
Abstract
Time-varying lumped disturbance and measurement noise are primary obstacles that restrict the control performance of permanent magnet synchronous motor (PMSM) drives. To tackle these obstacles, an adaptive nonsingular terminal sliding mode (ANTSM) algorithm is combined with augmented recursive sliding mode observer (ARSMO) for [...] Read more.
Time-varying lumped disturbance and measurement noise are primary obstacles that restrict the control performance of permanent magnet synchronous motor (PMSM) drives. To tackle these obstacles, an adaptive nonsingular terminal sliding mode (ANTSM) algorithm is combined with augmented recursive sliding mode observer (ARSMO) for PMSM speed regulation system in this paper. Generally, conventional nonsingular terminal sliding mode (NTSM) controller adopts a fixed and conservative control gain to suppress the time-varying disturbance, which will lead to unsatisfactory steady-state performance. Without requiring any information of the time-varying disturbance in advance, a novel barrier function adaptive algorithm is utilized to adjust the gain of NTSM controller online according to the amplitude of disturbance. In addition, the ARSMO is emoloyed to estimate the total disturbance and motor speed simultaneously, thereby alleviating the negative impact of measurement noise and excessive control gain. Comprehensive experimental results verify that the proposed enhanced ANTSM strategy can optimize the dynamic performance of PMSM system without sacrificing its steady-state performance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Control Systems)
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22 pages, 4306 KB  
Article
Three-Dimensional Trajectory Tracking Control Strategy for Underactuated UUVs Based on Improved ADRC
by Xuelong Geng, Zhengpeng Yang and Chao Ming
Symmetry 2025, 17(8), 1339; https://doi.org/10.3390/sym17081339 - 16 Aug 2025
Viewed by 497
Abstract
To address the challenge of low trajectory tracking accuracy for underactuated unmanned underwater vehicles (UUVs) under external disturbances, this study proposes a method integrating backstepping control with improved active disturbance rejection control (IADRC), which enhances high-precision trajectory tracking performance for UUV systems. Firstly, [...] Read more.
To address the challenge of low trajectory tracking accuracy for underactuated unmanned underwater vehicles (UUVs) under external disturbances, this study proposes a method integrating backstepping control with improved active disturbance rejection control (IADRC), which enhances high-precision trajectory tracking performance for UUV systems. Firstly, a five-degree-of-freedom dynamic model is established according to the symmetrical structure characteristics of an underactuated UUV, and virtual control inputs are designed using the backstepping method to address the underactuated characteristics. To improve convergence speed and tracking accuracy, a nonsingular terminal sliding mode control (NTSMC) is incorporated into the ADRC framework. Additionally, a parameter-adaptive tracking differentiator (PATD) is developed to mitigate the “differential explosion” problem inherent in backstepping virtual control inputs. A model-assisted extended state observer (ESO) is also designed to accurately estimate system disturbances. Stability analysis, grounded in Lyapunov theory, rigorously proves that all tracking errors converge asymptotically to a small bounded neighborhood of the origin. Simulation results demonstrate the effectiveness and superiority of the proposed control strategy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Engineering and Materials)
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16 pages, 13697 KB  
Article
Trajectory Tracking Closed-Loop Cooperative Control of Manipulator Neural Network and Terminal Sliding Model
by Deqing Liu, Zhonggang Xiong, Zhong Liu, Mengyi Li, Shunjie Zhou, Jiabao Li, Xintao Liu and Xingyu Zhou
Symmetry 2025, 17(8), 1319; https://doi.org/10.3390/sym17081319 - 14 Aug 2025
Viewed by 471
Abstract
To address the issue of low trajectory tracking accuracy in six-degree-of-freedom robotic arms, this study proposes a trajectory tracking control strategy that integrates a Radial Basis Function Neural Network (RBFNN) with non-singular fast terminal sliding mode (NFTSM) control. (1) The Lagrangian method is [...] Read more.
To address the issue of low trajectory tracking accuracy in six-degree-of-freedom robotic arms, this study proposes a trajectory tracking control strategy that integrates a Radial Basis Function Neural Network (RBFNN) with non-singular fast terminal sliding mode (NFTSM) control. (1) The Lagrangian method is utilized to develop the dynamic model of the robotic arm. At the same time, a non-singular fast terminal sliding surface is designed to accelerate trajectory convergence and resolve the singularity problem commonly associated with traditional sliding mode control by integrating nonlinear and fast terminal terms. (2) The RBF neural network is employed to globally approximate and compensate for uncertainties in the model and variations in the parameters of the robotic arm. (3) To confirm the overall stability of the control system with the proposed NFTSM control strategy, the Lyapunov stability theory is applied to formulate a Lyapunov function. (4) The six-degree-of-freedom robotic manipulator is simulated in the MATLAB/Simulink environment to assess the effectiveness of the proposed control method. In addition, experimental validation is carried out on a real robotic manipulator to verify the effectiveness of the proposed method. The simulation and experimental results show that, compared with NFTSM and RBFNN-SMC, the proposed control strategy significantly enhances the trajectory tracking accuracy of the six-degree-of-freedom robotic manipulator, thereby offering an effective and practical solution for its trajectory tracking control. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Computer)
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18 pages, 1643 KB  
Article
Precise Tracking Control of Unmanned Surface Vehicles for Maritime Sports Course Teaching Assistance
by Wanting Tan, Lei Liu and Jiabao Zhou
J. Mar. Sci. Eng. 2025, 13(8), 1482; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmse13081482 - 31 Jul 2025
Viewed by 378
Abstract
With the rapid advancement of maritime sports, the integration of auxiliary unmanned surface vehicles (USVs) has emerged as a promising solution to enhance the efficiency and safety of maritime education, particularly in tasks such as buoy deployment and escort operations. This paper presents [...] Read more.
With the rapid advancement of maritime sports, the integration of auxiliary unmanned surface vehicles (USVs) has emerged as a promising solution to enhance the efficiency and safety of maritime education, particularly in tasks such as buoy deployment and escort operations. This paper presents a novel high-precision trajectory tracking control algorithm designed to ensure stable navigation of the USVs along predefined competition boundaries, thereby facilitating the reliable execution of buoy placement and escort missions. First, the paper proposes an improved adaptive fractional-order nonsingular fast terminal sliding mode control (AFONFTSMC) algorithm to achieve precise trajectory tracking of the reference path. To address the challenges posed by unknown environmental disturbances and unmodeled dynamics in marine environments, a nonlinear lumped disturbance observer (NLDO) with exponential convergence properties is proposed, ensuring robust and continuous navigation performance. Additionally, an artificial potential field (APF) method is integrated to dynamically mitigate collision risks from both static and dynamic obstacles during trajectory tracking. The efficacy and practical applicability of the proposed control framework are rigorously validated through comprehensive numerical simulations. Experimental results demonstrate that the developed algorithm achieves superior trajectory tracking accuracy under complex sea conditions, thereby offering a reliable and efficient solution for maritime sports education and related applications. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Engineering)
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24 pages, 2070 KB  
Article
Reinforcement Learning-Based Finite-Time Sliding-Mode Control in a Human-in-the-Loop Framework for Pediatric Gait Exoskeleton
by Matthew Wong Sang and Jyotindra Narayan
Machines 2025, 13(8), 668; https://doi.org/10.3390/machines13080668 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 873
Abstract
Rehabilitation devices such as actuated lower-limb exoskeletons can provide essential mobility assistance for pediatric patients with gait impairments. Enhancing their control systems under conditions of user variability and dynamic disturbances remains a significant challenge, particularly in active-assist modes. This study presents a human-in-the-loop [...] Read more.
Rehabilitation devices such as actuated lower-limb exoskeletons can provide essential mobility assistance for pediatric patients with gait impairments. Enhancing their control systems under conditions of user variability and dynamic disturbances remains a significant challenge, particularly in active-assist modes. This study presents a human-in-the-loop control architecture for a pediatric lower-limb exoskeleton, combining outer-loop admittance control with robust inner-loop trajectory tracking via a non-singular terminal sliding-mode (NSTSM) controller. Designed for active-assist gait rehabilitation in children aged 8–12 years, the exoskeleton dynamically responds to user interaction forces while ensuring finite-time convergence under system uncertainties. To enhance adaptability, we augment the inner-loop control with a twin delayed deep deterministic policy gradient (TD3) reinforcement learning framework. The actor–critic RL agent tunes NSTSM gains in real-time, enabling personalized model-free adaptation to subject-specific gait dynamics and external disturbances. The numerical simulations show improved trajectory tracking, with RMSE reductions of 27.82% (hip) and 5.43% (knee), and IAE improvements of 40.85% and 10.20%, respectively, over the baseline NSTSM controller. The proposed approach also reduced the peak interaction torques across all the joints, suggesting more compliant and comfortable assistance for users. While minor degradation is observed at the ankle joint, the TD3-NSTSM controller demonstrates improved responsiveness and stability, particularly in high-load joints. This research contributes to advancing pediatric gait rehabilitation using RL-enhanced control, offering improved mobility support and adaptive rehabilitation outcomes. Full article
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18 pages, 9954 KB  
Article
Adaptive Continuous Non-Singular Terminal Sliding Mode Control for High-Pressure Common Rail Systems: Design and Experimental Validation
by Jie Zhang, Yinhui Yu, Sumin Wu, Wenjiang Zhu and Wenqian Liu
Processes 2025, 13(8), 2410; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13082410 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 453
Abstract
The High-Pressure Common Rail System (HPCRS) is designed based on fundamental hydrodynamic principles, after which this paper formally defines the key control challenges. The proposed continuous sliding mode control strategy is developed based on a non-singular terminal sliding mode framework, integrated with an [...] Read more.
The High-Pressure Common Rail System (HPCRS) is designed based on fundamental hydrodynamic principles, after which this paper formally defines the key control challenges. The proposed continuous sliding mode control strategy is developed based on a non-singular terminal sliding mode framework, integrated with an improved power reaching law. This design effectively eliminates chattering and achieves fast dynamic response with enhanced tracking precision. Subsequently, a bidirectional adaptive mechanism is integrated into the proposed control scheme to eliminate the necessity for a priori knowledge of unknown disturbances within the HPCRS. This mechanism enables real-time evaluation of the system’s state relative to a predefined detection region. To validate the effectiveness of the proposed strategy, experimental studies are conducted under three distinct operating conditions. The experimental results indicate that, compared with conventional rail pressure controllers, the proposed method achieves superior tracking accuracy, faster dynamic response, and improved disturbance rejection. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Design and Analysis of Adaptive Identification and Control)
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14 pages, 1346 KB  
Article
Composite Continuous High-Order Nonsingular Terminal Sliding Mode Control for Flying Wing UAVs with Disturbances and Actuator Faults
by Hao Wang and Zhenhua Zhao
Mathematics 2025, 13(15), 2375; https://doi.org/10.3390/math13152375 - 24 Jul 2025
Viewed by 332
Abstract
Flying wing UAVs are widely used in both civil and military areas and they are vulnerable to being affected by multi-source disturbances and actuator faults due to their unique aerodynamic configuration. This paper proposes composite continuous high-order nonsingular terminal sliding mode control controllers [...] Read more.
Flying wing UAVs are widely used in both civil and military areas and they are vulnerable to being affected by multi-source disturbances and actuator faults due to their unique aerodynamic configuration. This paper proposes composite continuous high-order nonsingular terminal sliding mode control controllers for the longitudinal command tracking control of flying wing UAVs. The proposed method guarantees not only the finite-time convergence of command tracking errors, but also the continuity of control actions. Simulation results validate the effectiveness of the proposed method. Full article
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12 pages, 3174 KB  
Article
Modeling and Control for an Aerial Work Quadrotor with a Robotic Arm
by Wenwu Zhu, Fanzeng Wu, Haibo Du, Lei Li and Yao Zhang
Actuators 2025, 14(7), 357; https://doi.org/10.3390/act14070357 - 21 Jul 2025
Viewed by 665
Abstract
This paper focuses on the integrated modeling and disturbance rejection of the aerial work quadrotor with a robotic arm. First, to address the issues of model incompleteness and parameter uncertainty commonly encountered in traditional Newton–Euler-based modeling approaches for such a system, the Lagrangian [...] Read more.
This paper focuses on the integrated modeling and disturbance rejection of the aerial work quadrotor with a robotic arm. First, to address the issues of model incompleteness and parameter uncertainty commonly encountered in traditional Newton–Euler-based modeling approaches for such a system, the Lagrangian energy conservation principle is adopted. By treating the quadrotor and robotic arm as a unified system, an integrated dynamic model is developed, which accurately captures the coupled dynamics between the aerial platform and the manipulator. The innovative approach fills the gap in existing research where model expressions are incomplete and parameters are ambiguous. Next, to reduce the adverse effects of the robotic arm’s motion on the entire system stability, a finite-time disturbance observer and a fast non-singular terminal sliding mode controller (FNTSMC) are designed. Lyapunov theory is used to prove the finite-time stability of the closed-loop system. It breaks through the limitations of the traditional Lipschitz framework and, for the first time at both the theoretical and methodological levels, achieves finite-time convergence control for the aerial work quadrotor with a robotic arm system. Finally, comparative simulations with the integral sliding mode controller (ISMC), sliding mode controller (SMC), and PID controller demonstrate that the proposed algorithm reduces the regulation time by more than 45% compared to ISMC and SMC, and decreases the overshoot by at least 68% compared to the PID controller, which improves the convergence performance and disturbance rejection capability of the closed-loop system. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Learning and Intelligent Control Algorithms for Robots)
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19 pages, 12234 KB  
Article
Non-Singular Terminal Sliding Mode Control for a Three-Phase Inverter Connected to an Ultra-Weak Grid
by Abdullah M. Noman, Abu Sufyan, Mohsin Jamil and Sulaiman Z. Almutairi
Electronics 2025, 14(14), 2894; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14142894 - 19 Jul 2025
Viewed by 315
Abstract
The quality of a grid-injected current in LCL-type grid-connected inverters (GCI) degrades under ultra-weak grid conditions, posing serious challenges to the stability of the GCI system. For this purpose, the sliding mode control (SMC) approach has been utilized to integrate DC energy seamlessly [...] Read more.
The quality of a grid-injected current in LCL-type grid-connected inverters (GCI) degrades under ultra-weak grid conditions, posing serious challenges to the stability of the GCI system. For this purpose, the sliding mode control (SMC) approach has been utilized to integrate DC energy seamlessly into the grid. The control performance of a GCI equipped with an LCL filter is greatly reduced when it is operating in a power grid with varying impedance and fluctuating grid voltages, which may result in poor current quality and possible instability in the system. A non-singular double integral terminal sliding mode (DIT-SMC) control is presented in this paper for a three-phase GCI with an LCL filter. The proposed method is presented in the α, β frame of reference without adopting an active or passive damping approach, reducing the computational burden. MATLAB/Simulink Version R2023b is leveraged to simulate the mathematical model of the proposed control system. The capability of the DIT-SMC method is validated through the OPAL-RT hardware-in-loop (HIL) platform. The effectiveness of the proposed method is first compared with SMC and integral terminal SMC, and then the DIT-SMC method is rigorously analyzed under resonance frequency events, grid impedance variation, and grid voltage distortions. It is demonstrated by the experimental results that the proposed control is highly effective in delivering a high-quality current into the grid, in spite of the simultaneous occurrence of power grid impedance variations in 6 mH and large voltage distortions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Power Electronics Converters, 2nd Edition)
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