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Chaos Control

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Title: Chaos Control


1
Chaos Control
  • Amir massoud Farahmand
  • SoloGen_at_SoloGen.net

2
The Beginning was the Chaos
  • Poincare (1892) certain mechanical systems could
    display chaotic motion.
  • H. Poincare, Les Methodes Nouvelles de la
    Mechanique Celeste, Gauthier-Villars, Paris,
    1892.
  • Lorenz (1963)Turbulent dynamics of the thermally
    induced fluid convection in the atmosphere (3
    states systems)
  • E. N. Lorenz, Deterministic non-periodic flow,
    J. of Atmos. Sci., vol. 20, 1963.
  • May (1976) Biological modeling with difference
    equations (1 state logistic maps)
  • R. M. May, Simple mathematical models with very
    complicated dynamics, Nature, vol. 261, 1976.

3
What is Chaos?
  • Nonlinear dynamics

4
What is Chaos?
  • Deterministic but looks stochastic

5
What is Chaos?
  • Sensitive to initial conditions (positive Bol
    (Lyapunov) exponents)

6
What is Chaos?
  • Continuous spectrum

7
What is Chaos?
  • Nonlinear dynamics
  • Deterministic but looks stochastic
  • Sensitive to initial conditions (positive Bol
    (Lyapunov) exponents)
  • Strange attractors
  • Dense set of unstable periodic orbits (UPO)
  • Continuous spectrum

8
Chaos Control
  • Chaos is controllable
  • It can become stable fixed point, stable periodic
    orbit,
  • We can synchronize two different chaotic systems
  • Nonlinear control
  • Taking advantage of chaotic motion for control
    (small control)

9
Different Chaos Control Objectives
  • Suppression of chaotic motion
  • Stabilization of unstable periodic orbit
  • Synchronization of chaotic systems
  • Bifurcation control
  • Bifurcation suppression
  • Changing the type of bifurcation (sub-critical to
    super-critical and )
  • Anti-Control of chaos (Chaotification)

10
Applications of Chaos Control (I)
  • Mechanical Engineering
  • Swinging up, Overturning vehicles and ships, Tow
    a car out of ditch, Chaotic motion of drill
  • Electrical Engineering
  • Telecommunication chaotic modulator, secure
    communication and
  • Laser synchronization and suppression
  • Power systems synchronization

11
Applications of Chaos Control (II)
  • Chemical Engineering
  • Chaotic mixers
  • Biology and Medicine
  • Oscillatory changes in biological systems
  • Economics
  • Chaotic models are better predictors of
    economical phenomena rather than stochastic one.

12
Chaos Controlling Methods
  • Linearization of Poincare Map
  • OGY (Ott-Grebogi-York)
  • Time Delayed Feedback Control
  • Impulsive Control
  • OPF (Occasional Proportional Feedback)
  • Open-loop Control
  • Lyapunov-based control

13
Linearization of Poincare Map (OGY)
  • First feedback chaos control method
  • E. Ott, C. Grebogi, and J. A. York, Controlling
    Chaos, Phys. Rev. Letts., vol. 64, 1990.
  • Basic idea
  • To use the discrete system model based on
    linearization of the Poincare map for controller
    design.
  • To use the recurrent property of chaotic motions
    and apply control action only at time instants
    when the motion returns to the neighborhood of
    the desired state or orbit.
  • Stabilizing unstable periodic orbit (UPO)
  • Keeping the orbit on the stable manifold

14
Linearization of Poincare Map (OGY)
Poincare section
15
Time-Delayed Feedback Control
  • Stabilizing T-periodic orbit
  • K. Pyragas, Continuous control of chaos be
    self-controlling feedback, Phys. Lett. A., vol.
    170, 1992.

16
Time-Delayed Feedback Control
  • Recently stability analysis (Guanrong Chen and
    ) using Lyapunov method
  • Linear TDFC does not work for some certain
    systems
  • T. Ushio, Limitation of delayed feedback control
    in nonlinear discrete-time systems, IEEE Trans.
    on Circ. Sys., I, vol. 43, 1996.
  • Extensions
  • Sliding mode based TDFC
  • X. Yu, Y. Tian, and G. Chen, Time delayed
    feedback control of chaos, in Controlling Chaos
    and Bifurcation in Engineering Systems, edited by
    G. Chen, 1999.
  • Optimal principle TDFC
  • Y. Tian and X. Yu, Stabilizing unstable periodic
    orbits of chaotic systems via an optimal
    principle, Physicia D, 1998.
  • How can we find T (time delay)?
  • Prediction error optimization method
    (gradient-based)

17
Impulsive Control
  • Occasional Feedback Controller
  • E. R. Hunt, Stabilizing high-period orbits in a
    chaotic system The diode resonator, Phys. Rev.
    Lett., vol. 67, 1991.
  • Stabilizing of the amplitude of a limit cycle
  • Measuring local maximum (minimum) of the output
    and calculating its deviation from desired one
  • Can be seen as a special version of OGY

18
Impulsive Control
  • Partial theoretical work has been done on
    justification of OPF
  • Recently methods for impulsive control and
    synchronization of nonlinear systems have been
    developed based on theory of Impulsive
    Differential Equations
  • V. Lakshmikantham, D. D. Bainov, and P. S.
    Simeonov, Theory of Impulsive Differential
    Equations, World Scientific Pub. Co., 1990.
  • T. Yang and L. O. Chua, Impulsive control and
    synchronization of nonlinear dynamical systems
    and application to secure communication, Int. J.
    of Bifur. Chaos, vol. 7, 1997.

19
Open-loop Control of Chaotic Systems
  • Change the behavior of a nonlinear system by
    applying an external excitation.
  • Suppressing or exciting chaos
  • Simple
  • Ultra fast processes
  • States of the system are not measurable
    (molecular level)
  • General feedforward control method for
    suppression or excitation of chaos has not
    devised yet.

20
Lyapunov-based methods
  • Most of mentioned methods have some
    Lyapunov-based argument of their stability.
  • More classical methods
  • Speed Gradient Method
  • A.L. Fradkov and A.Y. Pogromsky, Speed gradient
    control of chaotic continuous-time systems, IEEE
    Trans. Circuits Syst. I, vol. 43,1996.
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