Optimal flatness placement of sensors and actuators for controlling chaotic systems.
Christophe LetellierJean-Pierre BarbotPublished in: Chaos (Woodbury, N.Y.) (2021)
Controlling chaotic systems is very often investigated by using empirical laws, without taking advantage of the structure of the governing equations. There are two concepts, observability and controllability, which are inherited from control theory, for selecting the best placement of sensors and actuators. These two concepts can be combined (extended) into flatness, which provides the conditions to fulfill for designing a feedback linearization or another classical control law for which the system is always fully observable and fully controllable. We here design feedback linearization control laws using flatness for the three popular chaotic systems, namely, the Rössler, the driven van der Pol, and the Hénon-Heiles systems. As developed during the last two decades for observability, symbolic controllability coefficients and symbolic flatness coefficients are introduced here and their meanings are tested with numerical simulations. We show that the control law works for every initial condition when the symbolic flatness coefficient is equal to 1.
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