Adaptive Discrete Second Order Sliding Mode Control with Application to Nonlinear Automotive Systems
Mohammad Reza Amini, Mahdi Shahbakhti, Selina Pan

TL;DR
This paper introduces an adaptive second order discrete sliding mode control method for nonlinear systems, demonstrating significant improvements in tracking performance and robustness in automotive engine applications through real-time testing.
Contribution
It presents a novel adaptive second order discrete sliding mode control framework for MIMO nonlinear systems, with stability guarantees and real-time validation in automotive engines.
Findings
Improves tracking performance by up to 90% over first order SISO DSMC.
Enhances overall control performance by 25% when using MIMO structure.
Successfully applied and validated in real-time automotive engine control scenarios.
Abstract
Sliding mode control (SMC) is a robust and computationally efficient model-based controller design technique for highly nonlinear systems, in the presence of model and external uncertainties. However, the implementation of the conventional continuous-time SMC on digital computers is limited, due to the imprecisions caused by data sampling and quantization, and the chattering phenomena, which results in high frequency oscillations. One effective solution to minimize the effects of data sampling and quantization imprecisions is the use of higher order sliding modes. To this end, in this paper, a new formulation of an adaptive second order discrete sliding mode control (DSMC) is presented for a general class of multi-input multi-output (MIMO) uncertain nonlinear systems. Based on a Lyapunov stability argument and by invoking the new Invariance Principle, not only the asymptotic stability…
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