42 research outputs found

    A new reaching law for anti-disturbance sliding-mode control of PMSM speed regulation system

    Get PDF
    In this paper, in order to optimize the dynamic performance of the permanent magnet synchronous motor (PMSM) speed regulation system, a nonlinear speed-control algorithm for the PMSM control systems using sliding-mode control (SMC) is developed. First, a sliding-mode control method based on a new sliding-mode reaching law (NSMRL) is proposed. This NSMRL includes the system state variable and the power term of sliding surface function. In particular, the power term is bounded by the absolute value of the switching function, so that the reaching law can be expressed in two different forms during the reaching process. This method can not only effectively suppresses the inherent chattering, but also increases the velocity of the system state reaching to the sliding-mode surface. Based on this new reaching law, a sliding-mode speed controller (SMSC) of PMSM is designed. Then, considering the large chattering phenomenon caused by high switching gain, an improved anti-disturbance sliding-mode speed controller(ADSMSC) method, called SMSC+ESO method, is developed. This method introduces an extended state observer (ESO) to observe the lumped disturbance and adds a feedforward compensation item based on the observed disturbances to the SMSC. Finally, simulation and experimental results both show the validity of the proposed control method

    Motion control design of a PMSM and FPGA implementation for the Beam Wire Scanner at CERN

    Get PDF
    This thesis work describes the modelling, simulation, implementation and testing of a motion controller for a Permanent Magnet Synchronous Motor, used as an actuator for the Beam Wire Scanner at CERN. The dissertation, after a brief introduction to the subject, focuses on the design of the control system starting for the basics of motion control and the mathematical equations describing the various parts of the system. The architecture of the controller is explained as well as the design choices and their reasons. It consists in a three-level cascade feedback loop, regulated through three variable structure, saturated PID controllers with anti-windup architecture. Also, three feedforward actions are included, as well as a static decoupler and a steady-state Kalman filter. In the last chapters, the implementation of the control system on an ALTERA FPGA board is described and its performances are verified through a serie of experiments

    High-performance control of continuously variable transmissions

    Get PDF
    Nowadays, developments with respect to the pushbelt continuously variable transmission (CVT) are mainly directed towards a reduction of the fuel consumption of a vehicle. The fuel consumption of a vehicle is affected by the variator of the CVT, which transfers the torque and varies the transmission ratio. The variator consists of a metal V-belt, i.e., a pushbelt, which is clamped between two pulleys. Each pulley is connected to a hydraulic cylinder, which is pressurized by the hydraulic actuation system. The pressure in the hydraulic cylinder determines the clamping force on the pulley. The level of the clamping forces sets the torque capacity, whereas the ratio of the clamping forces determines the transmission ratio. When the level of the clamping forces is increased above the threshold for a given operating condition, the variator efficiency is decreased, whereas the torque capacity is increased. When the level of the clamping forces is decreased below the threshold for a given operating condition, the torque capacity is inadequate, which deteriorates the variator efficiency and damages the pulleys and the pushbelt. Since this threshold is not known, the level of the clamping forces is often raised for robustness, which reduces the variator efficiency. The challenge for the control system is to reduce the clamping forces towards the level for which the variator efficiency is maximized, although the variator efficiency is not measured. Furthermore, avoiding a failure of the variator in view of torque disturbances and tracking a transmission ratio reference are necessarily required. Two state-of-the-art control strategies are presently used, i.e., safety control and slip control. These control strategies involve limitations that follow from the model knowledge and/or the sensor use that underlies the control design. For this reason, the objectives of the research in this thesis are oriented towards improvements with respect to the model knowledge of both the hydraulic actuation system and the variator, which is subsequently exploited in the control design of both components, to improve the performance. The resources of the control designs are restricted to measurements from sensors that are standard. A cascade control configuration is proposed, where the inner loop controls the hydraulic actuation system and the outer loop controls the combination of the inner loop and the variator. The elements of the cascade control configuration are the subject of the research in this thesis. For the hydraulic actuation system, modeling via first principles and modeling via system identification are pursued. Modeling via first principles provides a nonlinear model, which is specifically suited for closed-loop simulation and optimization of design parameters. A modular approach is proposed, which reduces the model complexity, improves the model transparency, and facilitates the analysis of changes with respect to the configuration. The nonlinear model is validated by means of measurements from a commercial CVT. Modeling via system identification provides a model set, which is subsequently used for the hydraulic actuation system control design. A model set of high-quality is constructed, which is achieved by the design of the identification experiments that deals with the limited signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) that arises from actuators and sensors of low-quality. The hydraulic actuation system control design is multivariable, which is caused by the interaction between the hydraulic cylinders that is inherently introduced by the variator. Stability and performance are guaranteed for the range of operating conditions that is normally encountered, which is demonstrated with the experimental CVT. A variator control design is proposed that deals with both the transmission ratio and the variator efficiency in terms of performance variables, where the transmission ratio is measured, while the variator efficiency is not measured. The variator control design uses the standard measurement of the angular velocities, from which the transmission ratio is constructed, as well as the standard measurement of the pressure. Essentially, the variator control design exploits the observation that the maximum of the transmission ratio and the maximum of the variator efficiency are achieved for pressure values that nearly coincide. This observation is derived from both simulations with a nonlinear model and experiments with the experimental CVT. This motivates the use of the pressure-transmission ratio map, although the location of the maximum is not known. For this reason, the maximum of the input-output map is found by a so-called extremum seeking control (ESC) design, which aims to adapt the input in order to maximize the output. A robustness analysis shows that an input side disturbance that resembles a depression of the accelerator pedal and an output side disturbance that resembles the passage of a step bump are effectively handled. Finally, the ESC design is extended with a so-called tracking control (TC) design, which enables that optimizing the variator efficiency and tracking a transmission ratio reference are simultaneously achieved. The variator control design that is composed of the ESC design and the TC design is evaluated with the experimental CVT. Simulation of a driving cycle shows that the final variator control design outperforms the conventional variator control design in terms of the variator efficiency

    Steering control for haptic feedback and active safety functions

    Get PDF
    Steering feedback is an important element that defines driver–vehicle interaction. It strongly affects driving performance and is primarily dependent on the steering actuator\u27s control strategy. Typically, the control method is open loop, that is without any reference tracking; and its drawbacks are hardware dependent steering feedback response and attenuated driver–environment transparency. This thesis investigates a closed-loop control method for electric power assisted steering and steer-by-wire systems. The advantages of this method, compared to open loop, are better hardware impedance compensation, system independent response, explicit transparency control and direct interface to active safety functions.The closed-loop architecture, outlined in this thesis, includes a reference model, a feedback controller and a disturbance observer. The feedback controller forms the inner loop and it ensures: reference tracking, hardware impedance compensation and robustness against the coupling uncertainties. Two different causalities are studied: torque and position control. The two are objectively compared from the perspective of (uncoupled and coupled) stability, tracking performance, robustness, and transparency.The reference model forms the outer loop and defines a torque or position reference variable, depending on the causality. Different haptic feedback functions are implemented to control the following parameters: inertia, damping, Coulomb friction and transparency. Transparency control in this application is particularly novel, which is sequentially achieved. For non-transparent steering feedback, an environment model is developed such that the reference variable is a function of virtual dynamics. Consequently, the driver–steering interaction is independent from the actual environment. Whereas, for the driver–environment transparency, the environment interaction is estimated using an observer; and then the estimated signal is fed back to the reference model. Furthermore, an optimization-based transparency algorithm is proposed. This renders the closed-loop system transparent in case of environmental uncertainty, even if the initial condition is non-transparent.The steering related active safety functions can be directly realized using the closed-loop steering feedback controller. This implies, but is not limited to, an angle overlay from the vehicle motion control functions and a torque overlay from the haptic support functions.Throughout the thesis, both experimental and the theoretical findings are corroborated. This includes a real-time implementation of the torque and position control strategies. In general, it can be concluded that position control lacks performance and robustness due to high and/or varying system inertia. Though the problem is somewhat mitigated by a robust H-infinity controller, the high frequency haptic performance remains compromised. Whereas, the required objectives are simultaneously achieved using a torque controller

    Cavity Field Control for Linear Particle Accelerators

    Get PDF
    High-energy linear particle accelerators enable exploration of the microscopic structure of pharmaceuticals, solar cells, fuel cells, high-temperature superconductors, and the universe itself. These accelerators accelerate charged particles using oscillating magnetic fields that are confined in metal cavities. The amplitudes and phases of the electromagnetic fields need to be accurately controlled by fast feedback loops for proper accelerator operation.This thesis is based on the author's work on performance analysis and control design for the field control loops of the linear accelerator at the European Spallation Source (ESS), a neutron microscope that is under construction in Lund, Sweden. The main contribution of the thesis is a comprehensive treatment of the field control problem during flat-top, which gives more insight into the control aspects than previous work. The thesis demonstrates that a key to understand the dynamics of the field control loop is to represent it as a single-input single-output system with complex coefficients. This representation is not new itself but has seen limited use for field control analysis.The thesis starts by developing practical and theoretical tools for analysis and control design for complex-coefficients systems. This is followed by two main parts on cavity field control. The first part introduces parametrizations that enable a better understanding of the cavity dynamics and discusses the most essential aspects of cavity field control. The second part builds on the first one and treats a selection of more advanced topics that all benefit from the complex-coefficient representation: analysis of a polar controller structure, field control design in the presence of parasitic cavity resonances, digital downconversion for low-latency feedback, energy-optimal excitation of accelerating cavities, and an intuitive design method for narrowband disturbance rejection. The results of the investigations in this thesis provide a better understanding of the field control problem and have influenced the design of the field controllers at ESS
    corecore