2,061 research outputs found
A Unified Framework for the Study of Anti-Windup Designs
We present a unified framework for the study of linear time-invariant (LTI) systems subject to control input nonlinearities. The framework is based on the following two-step design paradigm: "Design the linear controller ignoring control input nonlinearities and then add anti-windup bumpless transfer (AWBT) compensation to minimize the adverse eflects of any control input nonlinearities on closed loop performance". The resulting AWBT compensation is applicable to multivariable controllers of arbitrary structure and order. All known LTI anti-windup and/or bumpless transfer compensation schemes are shown to be special cases of this framework. It is shown how this framework can handle standard issues such as the analysis of stability and performance with or without uncertainties in the plant model. The actual analysis of stability and performance, and robustness issues are problems in their own right and hence not detailed here. The main result is the unification of existing schemes for AWBT compensation under a general framework
Performance-based control system design automation via evolutionary computing
This paper develops an evolutionary algorithm (EA) based methodology for computer-aided control system design (CACSD)
automation in both the time and frequency domains under performance satisfactions. The approach is automated by efficient
evolution from plant step response data, bypassing the system identification or linearization stage as required by conventional
designs. Intelligently guided by the evolutionary optimization, control engineers are able to obtain a near-optimal ‘‘off-thecomputer’’
controller by feeding the developed CACSD system with plant I/O data and customer specifications without the need of
a differentiable performance index. A speedup of near-linear pipelineability is also observed for the EA parallelism implemented on
a network of transputers of Parsytec SuperCluster. Validation results against linear and nonlinear physical plants are convincing,
with good closed-loop performance and robustness in the presence of practical constraints and perturbations
Intelligent control of nonlinear systems with actuator saturation using neural networks
Common actuator nonlinearities such as saturation, deadzone, backlash, and hysteresis are unavoidable in practical industrial control systems, such as computer numerical control (CNC) machines, xy-positioning tables, robot manipulators, overhead crane mechanisms, and more. When the actuator nonlinearities exist in control systems, they may exhibit relatively large steady-state tracking error or even oscillations, cause the closed-loop system instability, and degrade the overall system performance. Proportional-derivative (PD) controller has observed limit cycles if the actuator nonlinearity is not compensated well. The problems are particularly exacerbated when the required accuracy is high, as in micropositioning devices. Due to the non-analytic nature of the actuator nonlinear dynamics and the fact that the exact actuator nonlinear functions, namely operation uncertainty, are unknown, the saturation compensation research is a challenging and important topic with both theoretical and practical significance.
Adaptive control can accommodate the system modeling, parametric, and environmental structural uncertainties. With the universal approximating property and learning capability of neural network (NN), it is appealing to develop adaptive NN-based saturation compensation scheme without explicit knowledge of actuator saturation nonlinearity. In this dissertation, intelligent anti-windup saturation compensation schemes in several scenarios of nonlinear systems are investigated. The nonlinear systems studied within this dissertation include the general nonlinear system in Brunovsky canonical form, a second order multi-input multi-output (MIMO) nonlinear system such as a robot manipulator, and an underactuated system-flexible robot system. The abovementioned methods assume the full states information is measurable and completely known.
During the NN-based control law development, the imposed actuator saturation is assumed to be unknown and treated as the system input disturbance. The schemes that lead to stability, command following and disturbance rejection is rigorously proved, and verified using the nonlinear system models. On-line NN weights tuning law, the overall closed-loop performance, and the boundedness of the NN weights are rigorously derived and guaranteed based on Lyapunov approach. The NN saturation compensator is inserted into a feedforward path. The simulation conducted indicates that the proposed schemes can effectively compensate for the saturation nonlinearity in the presence of system uncertainty
Implementation of wind turbine controllers
Three of the important, generic, implementation issues encountered when developing controllers for
pitch-regulated constant-speed wind turbines are considered, namely, (1) accommodation of the
strongly nonlinear rotor aerodynamics; (2) automatic controller start-up/shut-down; and (3)
accommodation of velocity and acceleration constraints within the actuator. Both direct linearisation
and feedback linearisation methods for accommodating the nonlinear aerodynamics are investigated and
compared. A widely employed technique for accommodating the nonlinear aerodynamics, originally
developed on the basis of physical insight, is rigorously derived and extended to cater for all wind
turbine configurations. A rigorous stability analysis of controller start-up is presented for the first time
and novel design guidelines are proposed which can significantly reduce the power transients at
controller start-up. The relation to anti-wind-up is noted and several aspects of an existing wind-turbine
controller start-up strategy are observed to be novel in the anti-wind-up context. Restrictive position,
velocity and acceleration constraints may all be present in wind turbines and the dynamic behaviour of
the actuator cannot be neglected. A novel, and quite general, anti-wind-up method, based on the startup
strategy, is proposed which caters for all these circumstances. The separate strategies for resolving
the implementation issues are combined to achieve an elegant controller realisation which
accommodates all the implementation issues in an integrated manner. The importance of adopting an
appropriate controller realisation is considerable and is illustrated for a 300 kW wind turbine. The
implementation issues encountered in this paper are, of course, not confined to wind turbines but are of
wider concern
A review of convex approaches for control, observation and safety of linear parameter varying and Takagi-Sugeno systems
This paper provides a review about the concept of convex systems based on Takagi-Sugeno, linear parameter varying (LPV) and quasi-LPV modeling. These paradigms are capable of hiding the nonlinearities by means of an equivalent description which uses a set of linear models interpolated by appropriately defined weighing functions. Convex systems have become very popular since they allow applying extended linear techniques based on linear matrix inequalities (LMIs) to complex nonlinear systems. This survey aims at providing the reader with a significant overview of the existing LMI-based techniques for convex systems in the fields of control, observation and safety. Firstly, a detailed review of stability, feedback, tracking and model predictive control (MPC) convex controllers is considered. Secondly, the problem of state estimation is addressed through the design of proportional, proportional-integral, unknown input and descriptor observers. Finally, safety of convex systems is discussed by describing popular techniques for fault diagnosis and fault tolerant control (FTC).Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
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Observer-based H∞ control for systems with repeated scalar nonlinearities and multiple packet losses
This paper is concerned with the H∞ control problem for a class of systems with repeated scalar nonlinearities and multiple missing measurements. The nonlinear system is described by a discrete-time state equation involving a repeated scalar nonlinearity, which typically appears in recurrent neural networks. The measurement missing phenomenon is assumed to occur, simultaneously, in the communication channels from the sensor to the controller and from the controller to the actuator, where the missing probability for each sensor/actuator is governed by an individual random variable satisfying a certain probabilistic distribution in the interval [0 1]. Attention is focused on the analysis and design of an observer-based feedback controller such that the closed-loop control system is stochastically stable and preserves a guaranteed H∞ performance. Sufficient conditions are obtained for the existence of admissible controllers. It is shown that the controller design problem under consideration is solvable if certain linear matrix inequalities (LMIs) are feasible. Three examples are provided to illustrate the effectiveness of the developed theoretical result
Multivariable control systems with saturating actuators antireset windup strategies
Preliminary, promising, results for introducing antireset windup (ARW) properties in multivariable feedback control systems with multiple saturating actuator nonlinearities and integrating actions are presented. The ARW method introduces simple nonlinear feedback around the integrators. The multiloop circle criterion is used to derive sufficient conditions for closed-loop stability that employ frequency-domain singular value tests. The improvement in transient response due to the ARW feedback is demonstrated using a 2-input 2-outpurt control system based upon F-404 jet engine dynamics
Global stabilization of multiple integrators by a bounded feedback with constraints on its successive derivatives
In this paper, we address the global stabilization of chains of integrators
by means of a bounded static feedback law whose p first time derivatives are
bounded. Our construction is based on the technique of nested saturations
introduced by Teel. We show that the control amplitude and the maximum value of
its p first derivatives can be imposed below any prescribed values. Our results
are illustrated by the stabilization of the third order integrator on the
feedback and its first two derivatives
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