Active Vibration Control with a Combination of Virtual Controlled Object-Based Model-Free Design and Fuzzy Sliding Mode Technique

Bibliographic Information

Published
2025-02
Resource Type
journal article
Rights Information
  • This version of the article has been accepted for publication, after peer review (when applicable) and is subject to Springer Nature’s AM terms of use, but is not the Version of Record and does not reflect post-acceptance improvements, or any corrections. The Version of Record is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s42417-024-01605-8
DOI
  • 10.1007/s42417-024-01605-8
Publisher
Springer

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Description

Purpose Active vibration control typically requires mathematical modeling of the plant, which increases development costs and burdens for designers. This study develops a novel model-free vibration controller that can be designed without using any models or parameters of a real controlled object.

Methods This study proposes a new model-free fuzzy sliding mode vibration controller based on a virtual controlled object (VCO). The key idea is the combination of the VCO-based model-free controller design, sliding mode control (SMC), and fuzzy adaptive compensation for chattering elimination. By inserting the VCO, defined as a single-degree-of-freedom (SDOF) structure, between a real controlled object and an actuator, the model-free control system is realized. According to a simple inequality-based condition, the VCO parameters are specified to enable the design of an active vibration controller without requiring any models or parameters of the controlled object. This design scheme is directly applied to the sliding mode control theory, and convergence is analyzed using a Lyapunov function technique. To eliminate the chattering phenomenon, a fuzzy-inference-based compensation is introduced. Considering variations in the switching function, this fuzzy inference modifies the nonlinear switching input online to prevent chattering while ensuring the state trajectory rapidly converge to the sliding surface.

Results Simulation verifications are conducted with various mechanical structures, including time-varying system. The present approach achieves good vibration control performance without causing the chattering phenomenon. Comparative study reveals the advantage of the present approach over the conventional model-based controller design from the viewpoint of its simple design procedure and robustness.

Conclusion The proposed model-free fuzzy SMC provides sufficient damping performance and excellent robustness, showing its practical usability.

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