958 research outputs found
Reset control for DC-DC converters: an experimental application
© 2019 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.Power converters in grid connected systems are required to have fast response to ensure the stability of the system. The standard PI controllers used in most power converters are capable of fast response but with significant overshoot. In this paper a hybrid control technique for power converter using a reset PI + CI controller is proposed. The PI + CI controller can overcome the limitation of its linear counterpart (PI) and ensure a fast flat response for power converter. The design, stability and cost of feedback analysis for a DC-DC boost converter employing a PI + CI controller is explored in this work. The simulation and experimental results which confirm the fast, flat response will be presented and discussed.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
No More Differentiator in PID:Development of Nonlinear Lead for Precision Mechatronics
Industrial PID consists of three elements: Lag (integrator), Lead
(Differentiator) and Low Pass Filters (LPF). PID being a linear control method
is inherently bounded by the waterbed effect due to which there exists a
trade-off between precision \& tracking, provided by Lag and LPF on one side
and stability \& robustness, provided by Lead on the other side. Nonlinear
reset strategies applied in Lag and LPF elements have been very effective in
reducing this trade-off. However, there is lack of study in developing a reset
Lead element. In this paper, we develop a novel lead element which provides
higher precision and stability compared to the linear lead filter and can be
used as a replacement for the same. The concept is presented and validated on a
Lorentz-actuated nanometer precision stage. Improvements in precision, tracking
and bandwidth are shown through two separate designs. Performance is validated
in both time and frequency domain to ensure that phase margin achieved on the
practical setup matches design theories.Comment: European Control Conference 201
'Constant in gain Lead in phase' element - Application in precision motion control
This work presents a novel 'Constant in gain Lead in phase' (CgLp) element
using nonlinear reset technique. PID is the industrial workhorse even to this
day in high-tech precision positioning applications. However, Bode's gain phase
relationship and waterbed effect fundamentally limit performance of PID and
other linear controllers. This paper presents CgLp as a controlled nonlinear
element which can be introduced within the framework of PID allowing for wide
applicability and overcoming linear control limitations. Design of CgLp with
generalized first order reset element (GFORE) and generalized second order
reset element (GSORE) (introduced in this work) is presented using describing
function analysis. A more detailed analysis of reset elements in frequency
domain compared to existing literature is first carried out for this purpose.
Finally, CgLp is integrated with PID and tested on one of the DOFs of a planar
precision positioning stage. Performance improvement is shown in terms of
tracking, steady-state precision and bandwidth
A feasibility study for reset control of an industrial batch reactor
Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 128-133).A feasibility study for the application of reset control to the temperature control loop of a pressurized exothermic batch leach reactor in the hydrometallurgical Precious Group Metals (PGM) industry is carried out. Keywords: Reset control; Clegg integrator; initial states; industrial batch reactor; temperature control; exothermic reactions; multiple reactions; dissolve; leach; hydrometallurgy; platinum; Precious Group Metals (PGMs)
Beyond the Waterbed Effect: Development of Fractional Order CRONE Control with Non-Linear Reset
In this paper a novel reset control synthesis method is proposed: CRONE reset
control, combining a robust fractional CRONE controller with non-linear reset
control to overcome waterbed effect. In CRONE control, robustness is achieved
by creation of constant phase behaviour around bandwidth with the use of
fractional operators, also allowing more freedom in shaping the open-loop
frequency response. However, being a linear controller it suffers from the
inevitable trade-off between robustness and performance as a result of the
waterbed effect. Here reset control is introduced in the CRONE design to
overcome the fundamental limitations. In the new controller design, reset phase
advantage is approximated using describing function analysis and used to
achieve better open-loop shape. Sufficient quadratic stability conditions are
shown for the designed CRONE reset controllers and the control design is
validated on a Lorentz-actuated nanometre precision stage. It is shown that for
similar phase margin, better performance in terms of reference-tracking and
noise attenuation can be achieved.Comment: American Control Conference 201
Negative Imaginary Control Using Hybrid Integrator-Gain Systems: Application to MEMS Nanopositioner
In this paper, we propose a new approach to address the control problem for
negative imaginary (NI) systems by using hybrid integrator-gain systems (HIGS).
We investigate the single HIGS of its original form and its two variations,
including a multi-HIGS and the serial cascade of two HIGS. A single HIGS is
shown to be a nonlinear negative imaginary system, and so is the multi-HIGS and
the cascade of two HIGS. We show that these three types of HIGS can be used as
controllers to asymptotically stabilize linear NI systems. The results of this
paper are then illustrated in a real-world experiment where a 2-DOF
microelectromechanical system nanopositioner is stabilized by a multi-HIGS.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication as a Full Paper in the
IEEE Transactions on Control Systems Technology (TCST
Reset controller design based on error minimization for a lane change maneuver
An intelligent vehicle must face a wide variety of situations ranging from safe and comfortable to more aggressive ones. Smooth maneuvers are adequately addressed by means of linear control, whereas more aggressive maneuvers are tackled by nonlinear techniques. Likewise, there exist intermediate scenarios where the required responses are smooth but constrained in some way (rise time, settling time, overshoot). Due to the existence of the fundamental linear limitations, which impose restrictions on the attainable time-domain and frequency-domain performance, linear systems cannot provide smoothness while operating in compliance with the previous restrictions. For this reason, this article aims to explore the effects of reset control on the alleviation of these limitations for a lane change maneuver under a set of demanding design conditions to guarantee a suitable ride quality and a swift response. To this end, several reset strategies are considered, determining the best reset condition to apply as well as the magnitude thereto. Concerning the reset condition that triggers the reset action, three strategies are considered: zero crossing of the controller input, fixed reset band and variable reset band. As far as the magnitude of the reset action is concerned, a full-reset technique is compared to a Lyapunov-based error minimization method to calculate the optimal reset percentage. The base linear controller subject to the reset action is searched via genetic algorithms. The proposed controllers are validated by means of CarSim.Agencia Estatal de Investigación | Ref. DPI2016-79278-C2-2-
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