508,800 research outputs found
Pole placement design for quantum systems via coherent observers
We previously extended Luenberger's approach for observer design to the
quantum case, and developed a class of coherent observers which tracks linear
quantum stochastic systems in the sense of mean values. In light of the fact
that the Luenberger observer is commonly and successfully applied in classical
control, it is interesting to investigate the role of coherent observers in
quantum feedback. As the first step in exploring observer-based coherent
control, in this paper we study pole-placement techniques for quantum systems
using coherent observers, and in such a fashion, poles of a closed-loop quantum
system can be relocated at any desired locations. In comparison to classical
feedback control design incorporating the Luenberger observer, here direct
coupling between a quantum plant and the observer-based controller are allowed
to enable a greater degree of freedom for the design of controller parameters.
A separation principle is presented, and we show how to design the observer and
feedback independently to be consistent with the laws of quantum mechanics. The
proposed scheme is applicable to coherent feedback control of quantum systems,
especially when the transient dynamic response is of interest, and this issue
is illustrated in an example.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, conferenc
Robust position control of a tilt-wing quadrotor
This paper presents a robust position controller for a tilt-wing quadrotor to track desired trajectories under external wind and aerodynamic disturbances. Wind effects are modeled using Dryden model and are included in the dynamic model of the vehicle. Robust position control is achieved by introducing a disturbance observer which estimates the total disturbance acting on the system. In the design of the disturbance observer, the nonlinear terms which appear
in the dynamics of the aerial vehicle are also treated as disturbances and included in the total disturbance. Utilization of the disturbance observer implies a linear model with nominal parameters. Since the resulting dynamics are linear, only PID type simple controllers are designed for position and attitude
control. Simulations and experimental results show that the performance of the observer based position control system is quite satisfactory
A passivity approach to controller-observer design for robots
Passivity-based control methods for robots, which achieve the control objective by reshaping the robot system's natural energy via state feedback, have, from a practical point of view, some very attractive properties. However, the poor quality of velocity measurements may significantly deteriorate the control performance of these methods. In this paper the authors propose a design strategy that utilizes the passivity concept in order to develop combined controller-observer systems for robot motion control using position measurements only. To this end, first a desired energy function for the closed-loop system is introduced, and next the controller-observer combination is constructed such that the closed-loop system matches this energy function, whereas damping is included in the controller- observer system to assure asymptotic stability of the closed-loop system. A key point in this design strategy is a fine tuning of the controller and observer structure to each other, which provides solutions to the output-feedback robot control problem that are conceptually simple and easily implementable in industrial robot applications. Experimental tests on a two-DOF manipulator system illustrate that the proposed controller-observer systems enable the achievement of higher performance levels compared to the frequently used practice of numerical position differentiation for obtaining a velocity estimat
Stabilization of Networked Control Systems with Sparse Observer-Controller Networks
In this paper we provide a set of stability conditions for linear
time-invariant networked control systems with arbitrary topology, using a
Lyapunov direct approach. We then use these stability conditions to provide a
novel low-complexity algorithm for the design of a sparse observer-based
control network. We employ distributed observers by employing the output of
other nodes to improve the stability of each observer dynamics. To avoid
unbounded growth of controller and observer gains, we impose bounds on their
norms. The effects of relaxation of these bounds is discussed when trying to
find the complete decentralization conditions
An active fault tolerant control approach to an offshore wind turbine model
The paper proposes an observer based active fault tolerant control (AFTC) approach to a non-linear large rotor wind turbine benchmark model. A sensor fault hiding and actuator fault compensation strategy is adopted in the design. The adapted observer based AFTC system retains the well-accepted industrial controller as the baseline controller, while an extended state observer (ESO) is designed to provide estimates of system states and fault signals within a linear parameter varying (LPV) descriptor system context using linear matrix inequality (LMI). In the design, pole-placement is used as a time-domain performance specification while H∞ optimization is used to improve the closed-loop system robustness to exogenous disturbances or modelling uncertainty. Simulation results show that the proposed scheme can easily be viewed as an extension of currently used control technology, with the AFTC proving clear “added value” as a fault tolerant system, to enhance the sustainability of the wind turbine in the offshore environment
Robust control in presence of parametric uncertainties: Observer-based feedback controller design
Robust output stabilization: improving performance via supervisory control
We analyze robust stability, in an input-output sense, of switched stable
systems. The primary goal (and contribution) of this paper is to design
switching strategies to guarantee that input-output stable systems remain so
under switching. We propose two types of {\em supervisors}: dwell-time and
hysteresis based. While our results are stated as tools of analysis they serve
a clear purpose in design: to improve performance. In that respect, we
illustrate the utility of our findings by concisely addressing a problem of
observer design for Lur'e-type systems; in particular, we design a hybrid
observer that ensures ``fast'' convergence with ``low'' overshoots. As a second
application of our main results we use hybrid control in the context of
synchronization of chaotic oscillators with the goal of reducing control
effort; an originality of the hybrid control in this context with respect to
other contributions in the area is that it exploits the structure and chaotic
behavior (boundedness of solutions) of Lorenz oscillators.Comment: Short version submitted to IEEE TA
Wind Turbine Model and Observer in Takagi-Sugeno Model Structure
Based on a reduced-order, dynamic nonlinear wind turbine model in
Takagi-Sugeno (TS) model structure, a TS state observer is designed as a
disturbance observer to estimate the unknown effective wind speed. The TS
observer model is an exact representation of the underlying nonlinear model,
obtained by means of the sector-nonlinearity approach. The observer gain
matrices are obtained by means of a linear matrix inequality (LMI) design
approach for optimal fuzzy control, where weighting matrices for the individual
system states and outputs are included. The observer is tested in simulations
with the aero-elastic code FAST for the NREL 5 MW reference turbine, where it
shows a stable behaviour both for IEC wind gusts and turbulent wind input.Comment: "The Science of Making Torque from Wind", Oldenburg, Germany, October
2012, European Academy of Wind Energ
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