123 research outputs found

    Uncertainty and disturbance estimator-based control of a flapping-wing aerial vehicle withwith unknown backlash-like hysteresis

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    Robust and accurate control of a flapping-wing aerial vehicle (FWAV) system is a challenging problem due to the existence of backlash-like hysteresis nonlinearity. This paper proposes uncertainty and disturbance estimator (UDE)-based control with output feedback for FWAV systems. The approach enables the acquisition of the approximate plant model with only a partial knowledge of system parameters. For the design of the controller, only the bandwidth information of the unknown plant model is needed, which is available through the UDE filter. The stability analysis of the closed-loop system with the UDE-based controller is presented. It is shown that the proposed control scheme can ensure the boundedness of the control signals. A number of numerical simulations are carried out to demonstrate the satisfactory trajectory tracking performance of the proposed method

    Composite hierarchical pitch angle control for a tidal turbine based on the uncertainty and disturbance estimator

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    With the fast development of tidal turbines for sustainable energy generations, reliable and efficient tidal pitch systems are highly demanded. This paper presents a systematic design for a novel tidal pitch system based on hydraulic servo and bevel geared transmission. This system holds the characteristics of compact and triangular structure, making it easy to be installed in a narrow turbine hub. The pitch system dynamics are modelled by taking account of model uncertainties and external disturbances. An uncertainty and disturbance estimator (UDE)-based robust pitch control algorithm is developed to achieve effective pitch angle regulation, disturbance rejection and generator power smoothing. The UDE controller is designed in a composite hierarchical manner that includes an upper level power smoothing controller and a low level pitch angle tracking controller. The performance of the proposed pitch system and the UDE control is demonstrated through extensive simulation studies based on a 600 kW tidal turbine under varying tidal speeds. Compared with the conventional controller, the UDE based pitch controller can achieve more reliable power smoothing and pitch angle tracking with higher accuracy

    Uncertainty and disturbance estimator design to shape and reduce the output impedance of inverter

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    Power inverters are becoming more and more common in the modern grid. Due to their switching nature, a passive filter is installed at the inverter output. This generates high output impedance which limits the inverter ability to maintain high power quality at the inverter output. This thesis deals with an impedance shaping approach to the design of power inverter control. The Uncertainty and Disturbance Estimator (UDE) is proposed as a candidate for direct formation of the inverter output impedance. The selection of UDE is motivated by the desire for the disturbance rejection control and the tracking controller to be decoupled. It is demonstrated in the thesis that due to this fact the UDE filter design directly influences the inverter output impedance and the reference model determines the inverter internal electromotive force. It was recently shown in the literature and further emphasized in this thesis that the classic low pass frequency design of the UDE cannot estimate periodical disturbances under the constraint of finite control bandwidth. Since for a power inverter both the reference signal and the disturbance signal are of periodical nature, the classic UDE lowpass filter design does not give optimal results. A new design approach is therefore needed. The thesis develops four novel designs of the UDE filter to significantly reduce the inverter output impedance and maintain low Total Harmonic Distortion (THD) of the inverter output voltage. The first design is the based on a frequency selective filter. This filter design shows superiority in both observing and rejecting periodical disturbances over the classic low pass filter design. The second design uses a multi-band stop design to reject periodical disturbances with some uncertainty in the frequency. The third solution uses a classic low pass filter design combined with a time delay to match zero phase estimation of the disturbance at the relevant spectrum. Furthermore, this solution is combined with a resonant tracking controller to reduce the tracking steady-state error in the output voltage. The fourth solution utilizes a low-pass filter combined with multiple delays to increase the frequency robustness. This method shows superior performance over the multi-band-stop and the time delayed filter in steady-state. All the proposed methods are validated through extensive simulation and experimental results

    Algorithmic approaches to high speed atomic force microscopy

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    Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityThe atomic force microscope (AFM) has a unique set of capabilities for investigating biological systems, including sub-nanometer spatial resolution and the ability to image in liquid and to measure mechanical properties. Acquiring a high quality image, however, can take from minutes to hours. Despite this limited frame rate, researchers use the instrument to investigate dynamics via time-lapse imaging, driven by the need to understand biomolecular activities at the molecular level. Studies of processes such as DNA digestion with DNase, DNA-RNA polymerase binding and RNA transcription from DNA by RNA polymerase redefined the potential of AFM in biology. As a result of the need for better temporal resolution, advanced AFMs have been developed. The current state of the art in high-speed AFM (HS-AFM) for biological studies is an instrument developed by Toshio Ando at Kanazawa University in Japan. This instrument can achieve 12 frames/sec and has successfully visualized the motion of protein motors at the molecular level. This impressive instrument as well as other advanced AFMs, however, comes with tradeoffs that include a small scan size, limited imaging modes and very high cost. As a result, most AFM users still rely on standard commercial AFMs. The work in this thesis develops algorithmic approaches that can be implemented on existing instruments, from standard commercial systems to cutting edge HS-AFM units, to enhance their capabilities. There are four primary contributions in this thesis. The first is an analysis of the signals available in an AFM with respect to the information they carry and their suitability for imaging at different scan speeds. The next two are algorithmic approaches to HS-AFM that take advantage of these signals in different ways. The first algorithm involves a new sample profile estimator that yields accurate topology at speeds beyond the bandwidth of the limiting actuator. The second involves more efficient sampling, using the data in real time to steer the tip. Both algorithms yield at least an order of magnitude improvement in imaging rate but with different tradeoffs. The first operates beyond the bandwidth of the controller managing the tip-sample interaction and therefore the applied force is not well-regulated. The second keeps this control intact but is effective only on a limited set of samples, namely biopolymers or other string-like samples. Experiments on calibration samples and λ-DNA show that both of the algorithms improve the imaging rate by an order of magnitude. In the fourth contribution, extended applications of AFMs equipped with the algorithmic approaches are the tracking of a macromolecule moving along a string-like sample and a time optimal path for repetitive non-raster scans along string-like samples

    Advanced Control of Piezoelectric Actuators.

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    168 p.A lo largo de las últimas décadas, la ingeniería de precisión ha tenido un papel importante como tecnología puntera donde la tendencia a la reducción de tamaño de las herramientas industriales ha sido clave. Los procesos industriales comenzaron a demandar precisión en el rango de nanómetros a micrómetros. Pese a que los actuadores convencionales no pueden reducirse lo suficiente ni lograr tal exactitud, los actuadores piezoeléctricos son una tecnología innovadora en este campo y su rendimiento aún está en estudio en la comunidad científica. Los actuadores piezoeléctricos se usan comúnmente en micro y nanomecatrónica para aplicaciones de posicionamiento debido a su alta resolución y fuerza de actuación (pueden llegar a soportar fuerzas de hasta 100 Newtons) en comparación con su tamaño. Todas estas características también se pueden combinar con una actuación rápida y rigidez, según los requisitos de la aplicación. Por lo tanto, con estas características, los actuadores piezoeléctricos pueden ser utilizados en una amplia variedad de aplicaciones industriales. Los efectos negativos, como la fluencia, vibraciones y la histéresis, se estudian comúnmente para mejorar el rendimiento cuando se requiere una alta precisión. Uno de los efectos que más reduce el rendimiento de los PEA es la histéresis. Esto se produce especialmente cuando el actuador está en una aplicación de guiado, por lo que la histéresis puede inducir errores que pueden alcanzar un valor de hasta 22%. Este fenómeno no lineal se puede definir como un efecto generado por la combinación de acciones mecánicas y eléctricas que depende de estados previos. La histéresis se puede reducir principalmente mediante dos estrategias: rediseño de materiales o algoritmos de control tipo feedback. El rediseño de material comprende varias desventajas por lo que el motivo principal de esta tesis está enfocado al diseño de algoritmos de control para reducir la histéresis. El objetivo principal de esta tesis es el desarrollo de estrategias de control avanzadas que puedan mejorar la precisión de seguimiento de los actuadores piezoeléctricos comerciale

    Uncertainty and Disturbance Estimator-Based Controller Equipped With a Time-Delayed Filter to Improve the Voltage Quality of Inverters

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    In this paper, a two-degrees-of-freedom control structure is proposed to minimize both total harmonic distortion and tracking error of inverter output voltage, adopting a resonant tracking controller and a modified uncertainty and disturbance estimator (UDE). Owing to the two-degree-of-freedom feature of the proposed control strategy, tracking and disturbance rejection tasks are decoupled and treated almost independently. A time-delay action is introduced into a commonly adopted low-pass UDE filter to minimize the output impedance magnitude around the odd harmonics, which is typical to nonlinear loads. Once the disturbance is properly rejected, a tracking resonant controller is designed to force the output of the nominal system to follow a sinusoidal reference with near-zero amplitude and phase error. The performance of the proposed control structure is fully verified by experimental results

    Willatzen, Morten

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