739 research outputs found

    An Active Disturbance Rejection Control Solution for Electro-Hydraulic Servo Systems

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    The intriguing history of disturbance cancellation control is reviewed in this thesis first, which demonstrates that this unique control concept is both reasonable and practical. One novel form of disturbance cancellation, ADRC (Active Disturbance Rejection Control), attracts much attention because of its good disturbance rejection ability and simplicity in implementation. Hydraulic systems tend to have many disturbances and model uncertainties, giving us a great motivation to find out a good control method. In this thesis, electro-hydraulic servo control problem is reformulated to focus on the core problem of disturbance rejection. An ADRC solution is developed and evaluated against the industry standard solution, with promising result

    Improved Third Order PID Sliding Mode Controller for Electrohydraulic Actuator Tracking Control

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    An electrohydraulic actuator (EHA) system is a combination of hydraulic systems and electrical systems which can produce a rapid response, high power-to-weight ratio, and large stiffness. Nevertheless, the EHA system has nonlinear behaviors and modeling uncertainties such as frictions, internal and external leakages, and parametric uncertainties, which lead to significant challenges in controller design for trajectory tracking. Therefore, this paper presents the design of an intelligent adaptive sliding mode proportional integral and derivative (SMCPID) controller, which is the main contribution toward the development of effective control on a third-order model of a double-acting EHA system for trajectory tracking, which significantly reduces chattering under noise disturbance. The sliding mode controller (SMC) is created by utilizing the exponential rule and the Lyapunov theorem to ensure closed-loop stability. The chattering in the SMC controller has been significantly decreased by substituting the modified sigmoid function for the signum function. Particle swarm optimization (PSO) was used to lower the total of absolute errors to adjust the controller. In order to demonstrate the efficacy of the SMCPID controller, the results for trajectory tracking and noise disturbance rejection were compared to those obtained using the proportional integral and derivative (PID), the proportional and derivative (PD), and the sliding mode proportional and derivative (SMCPD) controllers, respectively. In conclusion, the results of the extensive research given have indicated that the SMCPID controller outperforms the PD, PID, and SMCPD controllers in terms of overall performance.

    An Alternative Nonlinear Lyapunov Redesign Velocity Controller for an Electrohydraulic Drive

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    This research aims at developing control law strategies that improve the performances and the robustness of electrohydraulic servosystems (EHSS) operation while considering easy implementation. To address the strongly nonlinear nature of the EHSS, a number of control algorithms based on backstepping approach is intensively used in the literature. The main contribution of this paper is to consider an alternative approach to synthetize a Lyapunov redesign nonlinear EHSS velocity controller. The proposed control law design is based on an appropriate choice of the control lyapunov function (clf), the extension of the Sontag formula and the construction of a nonlinear observer. The clf includes all the three system variable states in a positive define function. The Sontag formula is used in the time derivative of our clf in order to ensure an asymptotic stabilizing controller for regulating and tracking objectives. A nonlinear observer is developed in order to bring to the proposed controller the estimated values of the first and the second time output derivatives. The design, the tuning implementation and the performances of the proposed controller are compared to those of its equivalent backstepping controller. It is shown that the proposed controller is easier to design with simple implementation tuning while the backstepping controller has several complex design steps and implementation tuning issue. Moreover, the best performances especially under disturbance in the viscous damping are achieved with the proposed controller

    Integration of Soft Computing and Fractional Derivatives in Adaptive Control

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    Realizing that generality and uniformity of the usual Soft Computing (SC) structures exclude the application of plausible simplifications relevant in the case of whole problem classes resulted in the idea that a novel branch of soft computing could be developed by the use of which far simpler and more lucid uniform structures and procedures could be applied than in the traditional ones. Such a novel approach to computational cybernetics akin to SC was developed at Budapest Tech to control inaccurately and incompletely modelled dynamic systems under external disturbances. Hydraulic servo valve controlled differential cylinders as non-linear, strongly coupled multivariable electromechanical tools serve as excellent paradigms of such difficulties. Their control has to cope with the problem of instabilities due to the friction forces between the piston and the cylinder, as well as with uncertainties and variation of the hydrodynamic parameters that makes it unrealistic to develop an accurate static model for them. In this paper a combination of this novel method with the use of fractional derivatives is applied for the control of a hydraulic differential cylinder. Simulation results well exemplifying the conclusions are also presented

    Model Identification And Controller Design For An Electro-Pneumatic Actuator System With Dead Zone Compensation

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    Pneumatic actuator system is inexpensive, high power to weight ratio, cleanliness and ease of maintenance make it’s a choice compared to hydraulic actuator and electromagnetic actuator. Nonetheless, the steady state error of the system is high due to the dead zone of the valve. In this paper, an Auto-Regressive with External Input (ARX) model structure is chosen to represent the pneumatic actuator system. The recursive least square method is used to estimate the model parameters. The pole-assignment controller is then developed for position tracking. To cater the problem of high in steady state error, the dead zone compensation is added to the system. The dead zone controller was designed based on the inverse dead zone model and the dead zone compensation designed based on the desired error. The proposed method is then experimentally with varies load and compares with Nonlinear PID controller. The result shows that the proposed controller reduced the overshoot and steady state error of the pneumatic actuator system to no overshoot and 0.025mm respectively. Index terms: System identification, recursive least square, ARX, dead zone compensator, pneumatic actuato

    A CENTER MANIFOLD THEORY-BASED APPROACH TO THE STABILITY ANALYSIS OF STATE FEEDBACK TAKAGI-SUGENO-KANG FUZZY CONTROL SYSTEMS

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    The aim of this paper is to propose a stability analysis approach based on the application of the center manifold theory and applied to state feedback Takagi-Sugeno-Kang fuzzy control systems. The approach is built upon a similar approach developed for Mamdani fuzzy controllers. It starts with a linearized mathematical model of the process that is accepted to belong to the family of single input second-order nonlinear systems which are linear with respect to the control signal. In addition, smooth right-hand terms of the state-space equations that model the processes are assumed. The paper includes the validation of the approach by application to stable state feedback Takagi-Sugeno-Kang fuzzy control system for the position control of an electro-hydraulic servo-system

    Proportional electro-hydraulic valves: from analogue to digital control

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    Proportional electro-hydraulic valves are ubiquitous as flow actuators in hydraulic systems. Flow regulation is the result of the accurate positioning of a spool driven by a solenoid and a position sensor, usually a Linear Variable Differential Transformer. The overall control consists of two hierarchical loops: the inner loop is the solenoid current regulator with a closed-loop bandwidth close to 1 kHz. A model-based digital regulator of this kind has been presented elsewhere: requirements and performance are here reminded. The outer loop is a position tracking control, in charge of an accurate positioning of the spool with respect to the valve openings. The paper addresses the outer loop and concentrates on the conversion of an existing industrial analogue controller into a digital one. The analogue controller is a nonlinear proportional, integrative and derivative controller including a second-order derivative, and is capable of recovering a dead-band hysteresis. The digital conversion provides the necessary position derivatives through a state predictor, in order to withstand the 5-kHz Nyquist limit of the power supplier. As such it departs from traditional conversions dating back to more than ten years ago. The digital control law is fed by the state predictions and repeats the analogue control law with some improvements. Preliminary experiments prove that the conversion repeats and improves analogue performance. Some flaws of the resulting digital controller are outlined and discussed in view of a model-based conversion.
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