Synthesizing Safety in Infinite-Horizon Optimal Control for Disturbed High-Relative-Degree Systems via Barrier-Regulating Auxiliary Variables

Abstract

Optimal stabilization of safety-critical nonlinear systems requires balancing long-term performance and strict safety constraints. Existing quadratic-programming-based control barrier function (CBF) safety filters are point-wise and may exhibit myopic behavior and local trapping when the safeguarding action conflicts with the nominal optimal control. This paper develops a safety-aware infinite-horizon optimal control framework by embedding a barrier-Lyapunov function (BLF)-based safeguarding action into the system dynamics and introducing a barrier-regulating auxiliary variable, thereby reformulating the original constrained problem as an unconstrained one on an extended state space. To mitigate local trapping, we introduce an adaptive alignment-conditioned tangential excitation orthogonal to the safety direction, with activation adaptively modulated by the degree of directional alignment between the nominal and safeguarding controllers, and incorporate it as an admissible L2 disturbance in an H∞ formulation. For high-relative-degree systems under disturbances, we further augment the recursive high-order safe-set construction with barrier compensation terms to obtain a high-order BLF and formulate an adversarial disturbance attenuation problem, which is approximately solved via safe-exploration-enhanced online critic learning. Simulations demonstrate reduced local trapping, improved safety--performance trade-offs, and safe operation under disturbances.

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