Abstract

Abstract Recently, a class of adaptive schemes has been developed for rejecting sinusoidal output disturbances with unknown frequencies, phases, and amplitudes. These adaptive schemes require an accurate model of the affected system's dynamics to function, and the controller performance degrades as the modeling error increases. While linear time-invariant (LTI) dynamics can adequately model the dynamics of some systems, a time-varying model of the system dynamics is more appropriate in certain scenarios. This paper proposes a robust adaptive scheme for rejecting disturbances that affect the output of a system described by a known linear time-varying model. The disturbances are described by an unknown number of sinusoidal terms with unknown time-varying frequencies. Analysis is done in ideal case where the disturbance frequencies are perfectly known to provide conditions guaranteeing the existence of a controller and a corresponding set of parameters which reject the disturbance. Analysis is then done in the more realistic adaptive scenario where the disturbance frequencies are unknown, and a robust adaptive scheme for selecting controller parameters which reject the disturbance is proposed. Performance of the controller with respect to the speed of variation in the plant model parameters is assessed via simulation.

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