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Controltheory 12

This document discusses different methods for compensating control systems, including proportional-integral-derivative (PID) controllers and feedback compensation. It provides examples of using proportional-derivative (PD) compensation to improve transient response by reducing rise time and overshoot. Feedback compensation is described as having the advantages of faster response without requiring additional amplification or cascade compensators when system characteristics prevent their use. Two approaches for feedback compensation are outlined: rate feedback and designing the minor loop's transient response separately.

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Jason Lee
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
64 views

Controltheory 12

This document discusses different methods for compensating control systems, including proportional-integral-derivative (PID) controllers and feedback compensation. It provides examples of using proportional-derivative (PD) compensation to improve transient response by reducing rise time and overshoot. Feedback compensation is described as having the advantages of faster response without requiring additional amplification or cascade compensators when system characteristics prevent their use. Two approaches for feedback compensation are outlined: rate feedback and designing the minor loop's transient response separately.

Uploaded by

Jason Lee
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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PI Compensator – Improves Steady-State Response What About Transient Response?

• Consider the system with the following RL


• Let’s try adding a zero @ -2, -3, and -4

• Careful where you place your zero!

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Summarizing Our Results Example 1


• PD compensator w/ %OS = 16%
• 1/3 Ts of uncompensated system

• Note 16% overshoot, corresponds to ζ = 0.504, i.e. slope of


1.714

3 4

1
PD Compensator – Improves Transient Response PID Controller Design

1. Evaluate uncomp sys to get determine desired transient


2. Design PD controller
3. Simulate to check
4. Redesign if necessary
5. Design PI controller to yield desired steady-state error
6. Determine K_1, K_2, and K_3
7. Simulate to check
• Assume K1 is constant, what happens if we increase K2? 8. Redesign if necessary

5 6

A Few More Words Feedback Compensation

• Disadvantage: More complicated


• Advantage: Faster response
• Sometimes physical system characteristics does not allow us to use
cascade compensators
• What if we don’t know what G(s) looks like?
• Often does not require additional amplification
• Two Approaches
7 8

2
Approach 1 Example 2
• Design a rate feedback
compensation
• Reduce Ts by a factor of 4
• Maintain %OS at 20%

• ζ = 0.456, slope = 1.95

9 10

Approach 2 A Few Final Words


• Design a minor loop’s transient response separately from the • Active components vs. passive components
closed-loop system response. • Analog vs. Digital
• Example 3:
• ζ = 0.8 for minor
• ζ = 0.6 for closed-loop

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