This paper describes a composite control approach that improves the accuracy and dynamic performance of the control of a voice-coil-driven, two-dimensional fast steering mirror (FSM). Strong nonlinearity, perturbation of parameters, unmodeled dynamics and external disturbances typically compromise the performance of the FSM. The proposed controller combines a tracking differentiator (TD), linear extended state observer (LESO), and a double-integral global fast terminal-sliding mode control (DIGFTSMC). The TD corrects the reference command signal, and the LESO approximates and counteracts system disturbances. The sliding surface is then equipped with the double-integral operators and an improved adaptive reaching law (IARL) to enhance tracking accuracy, response speed and robustness. Prior to physical experiments, systematic numerical simulations were conducted for five control algorithms across four typical test scenarios, verifying the proposed controller’s feasibility and preliminary performance advantages. It is found through experimentation that the proposed controller lowers the time esterified by the step response adjustment by 81.0% and 48.4% more than the PID controller and the DIGFTSMC approach with no IARL, respectively, and the proposed controller enhances error control when tracking sinuoidal signals and multisinusoidal signals. Simulation results consistently align with experimental trends, confirming the proposed controller’s superior convergence speed, tracking precision, and disturbance rejection capability. Furthermore, it cuts the angular movement swing by an average of over 44% through dismissing needless vibration interruptions as compared to other sliding mode control techniques. Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed composite control approach significantly enhances the disturbance rejection, control accuracy, and dynamic tracking performance of the voice-coil-driven FSM system.
Li et al. (Sat,) studied this question.