Abstract

This paper investigates command filter-based adaptive neural network (NN) minimal learning practical fixed-time control for stochastic nonlinear systems with prescribed performance and actuator faults. The considered system is in a high-order nonstrict-feedback stochastic structure with unknown dynamics and external disturbances. By combining NN with minimal learning parameter method, the need for prior knowledge of nonlinear functions is eliminated, and the number of weights’ updating laws for the NN is reduced to one, regardless of the system's order and number of neural nodes. This reduction significantly decreases the computational burden. Additionally, a unique property of the Gaussian basis function of NNs is applied to solve the algebraic loop problem of the nonstrict-feedback structure. A novel event-triggered control mechanism is proposed to save communication resources. In order to surmount the "explosion of complexity" and "singularity" problems, a novel fixed-time command filter is suggested, and then, a modified compensation mechanism is proposed to mitigate the errors that emerge from command filters. Furthermore, to improve the transient and steady-state performance of the tracking error, a prescribed performance function is taken into account. Via the Lyapunov stability theory, it will be shown that the developed adaptive backstepping control scheme, guarantees that the closed-loop system signals are bounded in probability in a fixed time, that the convergence time is independent of the initial value, and the tracking error remains within the decaying prescribed performance bounds all the time. Finally, the effectiveness and practicability of the theoretical results are verified by a practical simulation example.

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