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Commande par "backstepping"×Linéarisation par retour×Commande par Mode Glissant×
DomaineThéorie du contrôleThéorie du contrôleThéorie du contrôle
FamilleMachine learningMachine learningMachine learning
Année d'origine199519831977
Auteur d'origineMiroslav KrsticAlberto IsidoriVadim Utkin
Typealgorithmalgorithmalgorithm
Source fondatriceKrstic, M., Kanellakopoulos, I., & Kokotovic, P. (1995). Nonlinear and Adaptive Control Design. John Wiley & Sons. link ↗Isidori, A. (1995). Nonlinear Control Systems (3rd ed.). Springer-Verlag. DOI ↗Utkin, V. I. (1977). Variable structure systems with sliding modes. IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control, 22(2), 212-222. DOI ↗
AliasIntegrator Backstepping, Recursive Lyapunov DesignExact Linearization, Nonlinear Feedback Control, Input-Output LinearizationSMC, Variable Structure Control, Robust Control with Discontinuities
Apparentées344
RésuméBackstepping is a systematic nonlinear control design method that decomposes a complex nonlinear system into simpler subsystems and designs a controller recursively, layer by layer, ensuring stability at each step. Developed by Krstic, Kanellakopoulos, and Kokotovic, backstepping enables control of nonlinear systems without requiring exact model knowledge or full state linearization, combining flexibility with guaranteed stability.Feedback Linearization is a nonlinear control technique that uses a nonlinear state-feedback transformation to convert a nonlinear system into a linear one, enabling the use of standard linear control methods. Developed by Isidori, Sontag, and others in the 1980s, feedback linearization is conceptually elegant and powerful: if the system satisfies certain structural conditions (relative degree, decoupling matrix rank), the nonlinearities can be exactly cancelled through feedback, reducing the problem to linear design.Sliding Mode Control (SMC) is a robust nonlinear control technique that forces a system to follow a predetermined surface (the sliding surface) in state space by using discontinuous (bang-bang or high-frequency switching) control inputs. Developed by Utkin and further advanced by Slotine, SMC is remarkably insensitive to parameter variations and disturbances—once the system reaches the sliding surface, its behavior is determined solely by the surface geometry, not by uncertainty. This makes SMC powerful for nonlinear systems, manipulators, and uncertain systems where robustness is paramount.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Backstepping Control · Feedback Linearization · Sliding Mode Control. Consulté le 2026-06-17 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare