Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
694934 Annual Reviews in Control 2008 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper reviews three different types of challenges to adaptive control. The first group comprises challenges met in the subject’s development. They include difficulties associated with the MIT rule, bursting, the Rohr’s counterexample and unplanned instability in iterative identification and control. An understanding of these phenomena and mitigating strategies are now available. The second group comprises difficulties that are intrinsic to virtually any adaptive control algorithm, and that have frequently been overlooked. For example, if a plant is unknown, and a control objective is set, the objective may in practical terms be unachievable, and any adaptive control algorithm needs to deal with that possibility. The third group comprises some issues to which researchers are currently devoting significant attention, including multiple model adaptive control and model-free design.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Control and Systems Engineering
Authors
, ,