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Event-based adaptive neural resilient formation control for MIMO nonlinear MASs under actuator saturation and denial-of-service attacks

Xiangjun WuCollege of Control Science and Engineering, Bohai University, Jinzhou, Liaoning 121013, ChinaNing XuCollege of Information Science and Technology, Bohai University, Jinzhou, Liaoning 121013, ChinaShuo DingCollege of Control Science and Engineering, Bohai University, Jinzhou, Liaoning 121013, ChinaXudong ZhaoFaculty of Electronic Information and Electrical Engineering, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian 116024, Liaoning, ChinaBen NiuFaculty of Electronic Information and Electrical Engineering, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian 116024, Liaoning, ChinaWencheng WangCollege of Machinery and Automation, Weifang University, Weifang 261061, Shandong, China
2024en
ABI

Аннотация

This paper focuses on the distributed event-triggered adaptive neural resilient time-varying formation control problem for a class of multiple-input multiple-output nonlinear multi-agent systems, where all network communication links between agents are subjected to denial-of-service (DoS) attacks simultaneously. A second-order resilient time-varying formation estimator is designed to obtain the unknown leader information in DoS attack active intervals. Meanwhile, a state-triggering mechanism (STM) is designed to save system communication resources. Nevertheless, the STM can lead to virtual control laws being non-differentiable. To circumvent the problem, we first design an adaptive neural resilient formation control scheme. Then, based on the adaptive neural resilient formation control scheme, we replace continuous states with intermittent ones. By utilizing a dynamic filtering technique, an event-based adaptive neural resilient formation control scheme is designed. The key technology of control scheme design is to establish an improved first-order auxiliary system to deal with the negative impact of actuator saturation. It is proved that formation tracking errors can converge to a residual set around zero, and all signals in the closed-loop system are semi-globally uniformly ultimately bounded. Finally, simulation results are presented to show the effectiveness of the control scheme.

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