Abstract
This paper studies a key issue of developing reconfigurable fault-tolerant control to retain a nominal feedback controller and simultaneously handles actuator faults and system uncertainty, while the closed-loop system is stabilized with all control objectives achieved. A theoretical architecture of a reconfigurable control design is presented for a class of uncertain mechanical systems by using an observer technique. As a stepping stone, a nonlinear observer-based estimation mechanism is designed to reconstruct uncertain dynamics and actuator faults with the estimation error converging to zero within finite time. A reconfigurable control effort is then synthesized from the reconstructed knowledge. This control power operates as a compensation control part, and it is added to the nominal control part to accommodate system uncertainties and actuator faults. It is proved that the overall system resulted from the developed control framework has the same control performance of the nominal closed-loop system, including certain system dynamics and the nominal control effort. The effectiveness of the scheme is validated on a serial robotic manipulator.
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