Abstract

This work discusses the sampled-data sliding mode control problem for Markovian jump systems in the presence of Denial-of-Service (DoS) attacks, where the state signals are sampled stochastically and transmitted via vulnerable communication networks. The successful transmitted sequence with double randomness is established, and the probability distribution on both the attacked signals and stochastic delays are given. With the aid of the coordinate transformation, a linear sliding surface is constructed and the mode-dependent sliding mode controller is designed by means of only successfully transmitted state signals. Moreover, the resultant closed-loop systems composed of partial state and sliding mode variable are described as a continuous time-delay system with double randomness depending on the probability distribution characteristics of both the sampling periods and DoS attacks. Both the mean-square exponential ultimate boundedness of the closed-loop system and the reachability of the sliding surface are analyzed and the corresponding sufficient conditions are derived. Meanwhile, an optimization problem with genetic algorithm is formulated for achieving fast convergence of the state trajectory, small ultimate bound of the system state and small sliding bound. Finally, the simulation results via the numerical example are provided to illustrate the proposed sampled-data sliding mode control scheme.

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