830 research outputs found

    Formalization, Analysis, and Sampled-Data Design of Hybrid Integrator-Gain Systems

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    Formalization, Analysis, and Sampled-Data Design of Hybrid Integrator-Gain Systems

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    Modelling, simulation and control of photovoltaic converter systems

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    The thesis follows the development of an advanced solar photovoltaic power conversion system from first principles. It is divided into five parts. The first section shows the development of a circuit-based simulation model of a photovoltaic (PV) cell within the 'SABER' simulator environment. Although simulation models for photovoltaic cells are available these are usually application specific, mathematically intensive and not suited to the development of power electronics. The model derived within the thesis is a circuit-based model that makes use of a series of current/voltage data sets taken from an actual cell in order to define the relationships between the cell double-exponential model parameters and the environmental parameters of temperature and irradiance. Resulting expressions define a 'black box' model, and the power electronics designer may simply specify values of temperature and irradiance to the model, and the simulated electrical connections to the cell provide the appropriate I/V characteristic. The second section deals with the development of a simulation model of an advanced PVaware DC-DC converter system. This differs from the conventional in that by using an embedded maximum power tracking system within a conventional linear feedback control arrangement it addresses the problem of loads which may not require the level of power available at the maximum power point, but is also able to drive loads which consistently require a maximum power feed such as a grid-coupled inverter. The third section details a low-power implementation of the above system in hardware. This shows the viability of the new, fast embedded maximum power tracking system and also the advantages of the system in terms of speed and response time over conventional systems. The fourth section builds upon the simulation model developed in the second section by adding an inverter allowing AC loads (including a utility) to be driven. The complete system is simulated and a set of results obtained showing that the system is a usable one. The final section describes the construction and analysis of a complete system in hardware (c. 500W) and identifies the suitability of the system to appropriate applications

    Development of the Readout Electronics for the Beam Loss Monitors of the LHC

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    The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) of the European Laboratory for Particle Physics will be the largest particle accelerator in the world. It requires a large number of installations for its operation. One of these installations are the beam loss monitors which measure the particle losses. If these losses exceed a certain level, the beam must be extracted, otherwise the superconducting magnets could be damaged. For this reason, ionization chambers are installed outside the cryostat to transform the losses into an electric current. A wide dynamic range front end was developed to measure this current. The circuit consists of a current-to-frequency converter that works on the principle of balanced charge. Its output frequency is evaluated by counters and the data is serially transmitted from the tunnel to the surface, where the final data processing is performed. The data transmission suffers from the long cabling distance of up to 2 km. Using Manchester Code and line equalizers enables a data rate of 2 Mbit/s over a common twisted pair cable. This transmission problems lead to a detailed analysis of transmission lines in the frequency and time domain

    A spacecraft digital stabilization and control system study

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    Digital techniques to increase reliability and accuracy of spacecraft control and stabilization system

    Trajectory Optimization and Machine Learning to Design Feedback Controllers for Bipedal Robots with Provable Stability

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    This thesis combines recent advances in trajectory optimization of hybrid dynamical systems with machine learning and geometric control theory to achieve unprecedented performance in bipedal robot locomotion. The work greatly expands the class of robot models for which feedback controllers can be designed with provable stability. The methods are widely applicable beyond bipedal robots, including exoskeletons, and prostheses, and eventually, drones, ADAS, and other highly automated machines. One main idea of this thesis is to greatly expand the use of multiple trajectories in the design of a stabilizing controller. The computation of many trajectories is now feasible due to new optimization tools. The computations are not fast enough to apply in the real-time, however, so they are not feasible for model predictive control (MPC). The offline “library” approach will encounter the curse of dimensionality for the high-dimensional models common in bipedal robots. To overcome these obstructions, we embed a stable walking motion in an attractive low-dimensional surface of the system's state space. The periodic orbit is now an attractor of the low-dimensional state-variable model but is not attractive in the full-order system. We then use the special structure of mechanical models associated with bipedal robots to embed the low-dimensional model in the original model in such a manner that the desired walking motions are locally exponentially stable. The ultimate solution in this thesis will generate model-based feedback controllers for bipedal robots, in such a way that the closed-loop system has a large stability basin, exhibits highly agile, dynamic behavior, and can deal with significant perturbations coming from the environment. In the case of bipeds: “model-based” means that the controller will be designed on the basis of the full floating-base dynamic model of the robot, and not a simplified model, such as the LIP (Linear Inverted Pendulum). By “agile and dynamic” is meant that the robot moves at the speed of a normal human or faster while walking off a curb. By “significant perturbation” is meant a human tripping, and while falling, throwing his/her full weight into the back of the robot.PHDMechanical EngineeringUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/145992/1/xda_1.pd

    Applications of equivalent representations of fractional- and integer-order linear time-invariant systems

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    Nicht-ganzzahlige - fraktionale - Ableitungsoperatoren beschreiben Prozesse mit Gedächtniseffekten, deshalb werden sie zur Modellierung verschiedenster Phänomene, z.B. viskoelastischen Verhaltens, genutzt. In der Regelungstechnik wird das Konzept vor allem wegen des erhöhten Freiheitsgrades im Frequenzbereich verwendet. Deshalb wurden in den vergangenen Dekaden neben einer Verallgemeinerung des PID-Reglers auch fortgeschrittenere Regelungskonzepte auf nicht-ganzzahlige Operatoren erweitert. Das Gedächtnis der nicht-ganzzahligen Ableitung ist zwar essentiell für die Modellbildung, hat jedoch Nachteile, wenn z.B. Zustände geschätzt oder Regler implementiert werden müssen: Das Gedächtnis führt zu einer langsamen, algebraischen Konvergenz der Transienten und da eine numerische Approximation ist speicherintensiv. Im Zentrum der Arbeit steht die Frage, mit welchen Maßnahmen sich das Konvergenzverhalten dieser nicht ganzzahligen Systeme beeinflussen lässt. Es wird vorgeschlagen, die Ordnung der nicht ganzzahligen Ableitung zu ändern. Zunächst werden Beobachter für verschiedene Klassen linearer zeitinvarianter Systeme entworfen. Die Entwurfsmethodik basiert dabei auf einer assoziierten Systemdarstellung, welche einen Differenzialoperator mit höherer Ordnung verwendet. Basierend auf dieser Systembeschreibung können Beobachter entworfen werden, welche das Gedächtnis besser mit einbeziehen und so schneller konvergieren. Anschließend werden ganzzahlige lineare zeitinvariante Systeme mit Hilfe nicht-ganzzahliger Operatoren dargestellt. Dies ermöglicht eine erhöhte Konvergenz im Zeitintervall direkt nach dem Anfangszeitpunkt auf Grund einer unbeschränkten ersten Ableitung. Die periodische Löschung des so eingeführten Gedächtnisses wird erzielt, indem die nicht ganzzahlige Dynamik periodisch zurückgesetzt wird. Damit wird der algebraischen Konvergenz entgegen gewirkt und exponentielle Stabilität erzielt. Der Reset reduziert den Speicherbedarf und induziert eine unterlagerte zeitdiskrete Dynamik. Diese bestimmt die Stabilität des hybriden nicht-ganzzahligen Systems und kann genutzt werden um den Frequenzgang für niedrige Frequenzen zu bestimmen. So lassen sich Beobachter und Regler für ganzzahlige System entwerfen. Im Rahmen des Reglerentwurfs können durch den Resets das Verhalten für niedrige und hohe Frequenzen in gewissen Grenzen getrennt voneinander entworfen werden.Non-integer, so-called fractional-order derivative operators allow to describe systems with infinite memory. Hence they are attractive to model various phenomena, e.g. viscoelastic deformation. In the field of control theory, both the higher degree of freedom in the frequency domain as well as the easy generalization of PID control have been the main motivation to extend various advanced control concepts to the fractional-order domain. The long term memory of these operators which helps to model real life phenomena, has, however, negative effects regarding the application as controllers or observers. Due to the infinite memory, the transients only decay algebraically and the implementation requires a lot of physical memory. The main focus of this thesis is the question of how to influence the convergence rates of these fractional-order systems by changing the type of convergence. The first part is concerned with the observer design for different classes of linear time-invariant fractional-order systems. We derive associated system representations with an increased order of differentiation. Based on these systems, the observers are designed to take the unknown memory into account and lead to higher convergence rates. The second part explores the representation of integer-order linear time-invariant systems in terms of fractional-order derivatives. The application of the fractional-order operator introduces an unbounded first-order derivative at the initial time. This accelerates the convergence for a short time interval. With periodic deletion of the memory - a reset of the fractional-order dynamics - the slow algebraic decay is avoided and exponential stability can be achieved despite the fractional-order terms. The periodic reset leads to a reduced implementation demand and also induces underlying discrete time dynamics which can be used to prove stability of the hybrid fractional-order system and to give an interpretation of the reset in the frequency domain for the low frequency signals. This concept of memory reset is applied to design an observer and improve fractional-order controllers for integer-order processes. For the controller design this gives us the possibility to design the high-frequency response independently from the behavior at lower frequencies within certain limits
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