Abstract

Although important improvements in the area of robust control of nonlinear systems have been presented in the literature, most of the developed controllers suffer from complexity and large dependency on accurate mathematical formulation of the models. Recently, model-free robust control techniques were introduced and have shown good performance when applied to multi-input–multi-output systems. The model-free approach is characterized by the nonuse of any prior knowledge about the underlying structure and/or associated parameters of the dynamical system. Therefore, the major criteria for assessing the effectiveness of these controllers are related to their ability to handle unknown inputs and disturbances, as well as achieving the desired tracking performance in presence of faults and malfunctions. This work considers the development of robust fault-tolerant controllers based on the model-free approach and their application to multirotor unmanned aerial vehicles’ (UAVs) systems. The different controllers based on intelligent proportional-derivative (iPD), intelligent backstepping (iBackstepping), and adaptive control are compared in terms of performance, ease of implementation and parameters tuning. The simulated results, tested on Matlab/Simulink on a full nonlinear model of a hexarotor UAV, validate the theoretical advantages of the adaptive approach with respect to multiple criteria such as improved tracking performance in case of existence of actuators faults when compared to the iPD and iBackstepping control methods at the cost of increased complexity.

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