Abstract
Microparticles are increasingly employed as drug carriers inside the human body. To avoid collision with environment, they reach their destination following a predefined trajectory. However, due to the various disturbances, tracking control of microparticles is still a challenge. In this work, we propose to use an Adaptive Nonlinear PID (A-NPID) controller for trajectory tracking of microparticles. A-NPID allows the gains to be continuously adjusted to satisfy the performance requirements at different operating conditions. An in-vitro study is conducted to verify the proposed controller where a microparticle of 100 m diameter is put to navigate through an open fluidic reservoir with virtual obstacles. Firstly, a collision-free trajectory is generated using a path-planning algorithm. Secondly, the microparticle dynamic model, when moving under the influence of external forces, is derived, and employed to design the A-NPID control law. The proposed controller successfully allowed the particle to navigate autonomously following the reference collision-free trajectory in presence of varying environmental conditions. Moreover, the particle could reach its targeted position with a minimal steady-state error of 4 m. A degradation in the performance was observed when only a PID controller was used in the absence of adaptive terms. The results have been verified by simulation and experimentally.
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