Under Control: Empowering Disturbance Observer Controllers with the Fourier Transform

Korea Maritime & Ocean University
4 min readNov 25, 2020

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Scientists leverage a powerful mathematical tool to extend the applicability of a popular type of controller

Scientists from the National Korea Maritime and Ocean University and Yonsei University, Korea, combine the fuzzy disturbance observer-based control theory with the Fourier transform to design a controller that can handle nonperiodic, nonlinear disturbances. This feature makes their approach suitable for dynamic real-world systems such as drones, which have to deal with nonperiodic disturbances like the wind and changes in air resistance.

Scientists leverage a powerful mathematical tool to extend the applicability of a popular type of controller
Scientists leverage a powerful mathematical tool to extend the applicability of a popular type of controller

As modern society progresses, and automated systems become more sophisticated and complex, the importance of designing advanced and reliable controllers skyrockets. Controllers monitor system variables and ensure that processes and machines operate stably within defined limits. Over the last two decades, controllers based on the disturbance observer-based control (DOBC) theory have become increasingly popular. These controllers measure external disturbances affecting the system and compensate them as necessary in order to keep the system stable. However, existing implementations of this theory can only manage periodic disturbances, which greatly limits their applicability — in the real world, disturbances can take many forms and are usually nonperiodic.

In a recent study published in IEEE Access, a pair of Korean scientists tackled this problem through an innovative approach: combining the DOBC theory with a powerful mathematical tool called the Fourier transform. Dr Han Sol Kim from the National Korea Maritime and Ocean University explains their reasoning: “The Fourier transform can be used to represent a nonperiodic disturbance as a sum of infinite periodic disturbances. Then, by selecting the most dominant periodic disturbances only, we can design distinct DOBCs that compensate for each one.

To achieve this, the scientists began with the Takagi–Sugeno fuzzy model, an approach that represents complex nonlinear systems — which describe many real-world dynamic systems — as linear subsystems. By combining a slightly modified version of this fuzzy modelling method with the DOBC theory and applying the Fourier transform, they managed to design a controller with a better response compared with other state-of-the-art methods, as shown through simulations.

This controller design could be particularly useful for modern technological systems such as unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), commonly known as drones. The performance of UAVs largely depends on how well they can automatically handle external disturbances such as the wind and changes in air resistance. In this regard, Dr Kim remarks: “Without properly compensating for disturbances, UAVs can cause accidents, harming people and destroying property. I believe that our method will be an efficient solution for UAV systems because it can guarantee robust performance against disturbances.

Their approach is purely theoretical so far, but they plan on implementing it in a real hardware platform in the near future. If all goes well, we might just have a new effective method for keeping our machines under control.

Reference

Authors: Sounghwan Hwang (1) and Han Sol Kim (2)

Title of original paper: Extended Disturbance Observer-Based Integral Sliding Mode Control for Nonlinear System via T–S Fuzzy Model

Journal: IEEE Access

DOI: 10.1109/ACCESS.2020.3004241

Affiliations:

(1) Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Yonsei University

(2) Department of Control and Automation Engineering, National Korea Maritime and Ocean University

About National Korea Maritime & Ocean University

South Korea’s most prestigious university for maritime studies, transportation science and engineering, the National Korea Maritime & Ocean University is located on an island in Busan. The university was established in 1945 and since then has merged with other universities to currently being the only post-secondary institution that specializes in maritime sciences and engineering. It has four colleges that offer both undergraduate and graduate courses.

Website: http://www.kmou.ac.kr/english/main.do

About the authors

Han Sol Kim received his B.S. degree in Electronic and Computer Engineering from Hanyang University, South Korea, in 2011 and his M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in Electrical and Electronic Engineering from Yonsei University, Korea, in 2012 and 2018, respectively. He worked with Samsung Korea from 2018 to 2019 as a Senior Engineer. Since 2019, he has been with the Department of Control and Automation Engineering at the National Korea Maritime and Ocean University, where he is currently an Assistant Professor. His current research interests include intelligent robots, intelligent control, and unmanned aerial vehicles.

Sounghwan Hwang received his B.S. degree from the Division of Robotics, Kwangwoon University, South Korea, in 2017, and his M.S. degree in Electrical and Electronic Engineering from Yonsei University, South Korea, in 2019. His current research interests include control theory, dynamic systems, nonlinear system control, model predictive control, and data-driven approaches for dynamic system analysis.

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Korea Maritime & Ocean University
Korea Maritime & Ocean University

Written by Korea Maritime & Ocean University

Developing ourself as a world class university, specializing in maritime and oceanography. Leading to grow in the maritime industry. http://www.kmou.ac.kr

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