The Design of Feedback Control Systems Containing a Saturation Type Nonlinearity

Abstract

A derivation of the optimum response for a step input for plant transfer functions which have an unstable pole and further data on plants with a single zero in the left half of the s plane. The calculated data are presented tabulated in normalized form. Optimum control systems are considered. The optimum system is defined as one which keeps the error as small as possible regardless of the input, under the constraint that the input to the plant (or controlled system) is limited. Intuitive arguments show that in the case where only the error can be sensed directly, the optimum system is obtained from the optimum relay or on-off solution. References to known solutions are presented. For the case when the system is of the sampled-data type, arguments are presented which indicate the optimum sampled-data system may be extremely difficult if not impossible to realize practically except for very simple plant transfer functions. Two examples of aircraft attitude autopilots are presented, one for a statically stable and the other for a statically unstable airframe. The rate of change of elevator motion is assumed limited for these examples. It is shown that by use of nonlinear design techniques described in NASA TN D-20 one can obtain near optimum response for step inputs and reason- able response to sine wave inputs for either case. Also, the nonlinear design prevents inputs from driving the system unstable for either case

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