87,539 research outputs found
Disturbance Observer-based Robust Control and Its Applications: 35th Anniversary Overview
Disturbance Observer has been one of the most widely used robust control
tools since it was proposed in 1983. This paper introduces the origins of
Disturbance Observer and presents a survey of the major results on Disturbance
Observer-based robust control in the last thirty-five years. Furthermore, it
explains the analysis and synthesis techniques of Disturbance Observer-based
robust control for linear and nonlinear systems by using a unified framework.
In the last section, this paper presents concluding remarks on Disturbance
Observer-based robust control and its engineering applications.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Dead-Time compensators: A unified approach
IFAC Linear Time Delay Systems,Grenoble,France,1998This paper shows how most dead-time compensators can be considered as a particular case ofa proposed general control structure. The proposed structure can be tuned taking into account the performance and robustness ofthe closed-loop. The obtained controller is more general and allows better results than previous algorithms. In order to illustrate the results, some simulation examples are shown
Investigation of Air Transportation Technology at Princeton University, 1989-1990
The Air Transportation Technology Program at Princeton University proceeded along six avenues during the past year: microburst hazards to aircraft; machine-intelligent, fault tolerant flight control; computer aided heuristics for piloted flight; stochastic robustness for flight control systems; neural networks for flight control; and computer aided control system design. These topics are briefly discussed, and an annotated bibliography of publications that appeared between January 1989 and June 1990 is given
A robust adaptive robot controller
A globally convergent adaptive control scheme for robot motion control with the following features is proposed. First, the adaptation law possesses enhanced robustness with respect to noisy velocity measurements. Second, the controller does not require the inclusion of high gain loops that may excite the unmodeled dynamics and amplify the noise level. Third, we derive for the unknown parameter design a relationship between compensator gains and closed-loop convergence rates that is independent of the robot task. A simulation example of a two-DOF manipulator featuring some aspects of the control scheme is give
Design and evaluation of a robust dynamic neurocontroller for a multivariable aircraft control problem
The design of a dynamic neurocontroller with good robustness properties is presented for a multivariable aircraft control problem. The internal dynamics of the neurocontroller are synthesized by a state estimator feedback loop. The neurocontrol is generated by a multilayer feedforward neural network which is trained through backpropagation to minimize an objective function that is a weighted sum of tracking errors, and control input commands and rates. The neurocontroller exhibits good robustness through stability margins in phase and vehicle output gains. By maintaining performance and stability in the presence of sensor failures in the error loops, the structure of the neurocontroller is also consistent with the classical approach of flight control design
System-level, Input-output and New Parameterizations of Stabilizing Controllers, and Their Numerical Computation
It is known that the set of internally stabilizing controller
is non-convex, but it admits convex
characterizations using certain closed-loop maps: a classical result is the
{Youla parameterization}, and two recent notions are the {system-level
parameterization} (SLP) and the {input-output parameterization} (IOP). In this
paper, we address the existence of new convex parameterizations and discuss
potential tradeoffs of each parametrization in different scenarios. Our main
contributions are: 1) We first reveal that only four groups of stable
closed-loop transfer matrices are equivalent to internal stability: one of them
is used in the SLP, another one is used in the IOP, and the other two are new,
leading to two new convex parameterizations of . 2)
We then investigate the properties of these parameterizations after imposing
the finite impulse response (FIR) approximation, revealing that the IOP has the
best ability of approximating given FIR
constraints. 3) These four parameterizations require no \emph{a priori}
doubly-coprime factorization of the plant, but impose a set of equality
constraints. However, these equality constraints will never be satisfied
exactly in numerical computation. We prove that the IOP is numerically robust
for open-loop stable plants, in the sense that small mismatches in the equality
constraints do not compromise the closed-loop stability. The SLP is known to
enjoy numerical robustness in the state feedback case; here, we show that
numerical robustness of the four-block SLP controller requires case-by-case
analysis in the general output feedback case.Comment: 20 pages; 5 figures. Added extensions on numerial computation and
robustness of closed-loop parameterization
State-space approach to nonlinear predictive generalized minimum variance control
A Nonlinear Predictive Generalized Minimum Variance (NPGMV) control algorithm is introduced for the control of nonlinear discrete-time multivariable systems. The plant model is represented by the combination of a very general nonlinear operator and also a linear subsystem which can be open-loop unstable and is represented in state-space model form. The multi-step predictive control cost index to be minimised involves both weighted error and control signal costing terms. The solution for the control law is derived in the time-domain using a general operator representation of the process. The controller includes an internal model of the nonlinear process but because of the assumed structure of the system the state observer is only required to be linear. In the asymptotic case, where the plant is linear, the controller reduces to a state-space version of the well known GPC controller
Adaptive multichannel control of time-varying broadband noise and vibrations
This paper presents results obtained from a number of applications in which a recent adaptive algorithm for broadband multichannel active noise control is used. The core of the algorithm uses the inverse of the minimum-phase part of the secondary path for improvement of the speed of convergence. A further improvement of the speed of convergence is obtained by using double control filters for elimination of adaptation loop delay. Regularization was found to be necessary for robust operation. The regularization technique which is used preserves the structure to eliminate the adaptation loop delay. Depending on the application at hand, a number of extensions are used for this algorithm. For an application with rapidly changing disturbance spectra, the core algorithm was extended with an iterative affine projection scheme, leading to improved convergence rates as compared to the standard nomalized lms update rules. In another application, in which the influence of the parametric uncertainties was critical, the core algorithm was extended with low authority control loops operating at high sample rates. In addition, results of other applications are given, such as control of acoustic energy density and control of time-varying periodic and non-periodic vibrations
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