Adaptive Neural Event-Triggered Control for Discrete-Time Strict-Feedback Nonlinear Systems.

Journal: IEEE transactions on cybernetics
Published Date:

Abstract

This paper proposes a novel event-triggered (ET) adaptive neural control scheme for a class of discrete-time nonlinear systems in a strict-feedback form. In the proposed scheme, the ideal control input is derived in a recursive design process, which relies on system states only and is unrelated to virtual control laws. In this case, the high-order neural networks (NNs) are used to approximate the ideal control input (but not the virtual control laws), and then the corresponding adaptive neural controller is developed under the ET mechanism. A modified NN weight updating law, nonperiodically tuned at triggering instants, is designed to guarantee the uniformly ultimate boundedness (UUB) of NN weight estimates for all sampling times. In virtue of the bounded NN weight estimates and a dead-zone operator, the ET condition together with an adaptive ET threshold coefficient is constructed to guarantee the UUB of the closed-loop networked control system through the Lyapunov stability theory, thereby largely easing the network communication load. The proposed ET condition is easy to implement because of the avoidance of: 1) the use of the intermediate ET conditions in the backstepping procedure; 2) the computation of virtual control laws; and 3) the redundant triggering of events when the system states converge to a desired region. The validity of the presented scheme is demonstrated by simulation results.

Authors

  • Min Wang
    National and Local Joint Engineering Research Center of Ecological Treatment Technology for Urban Water Pollution, Wenzhou University, Wenzhou 325035, China.
  • Zidong Wang
    Department of Information Systems and Computing, Brunel University, Uxbridge, Middlesex, UB8 3PH, UK; Faculty of Engineering, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah 21589, Saudi Arabia. Electronic address: zidong.wang@brunel.ac.uk.
  • Yun Chen
  • Weiguo Sheng